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Gili Air Island, Gili Matra Marine National Park, Indonesia
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Marine Conservation: indocoral.org Dive Centre: 3wdivegili.com Divemaster Internship: 3wdivemaster.com
Gili Air Island, Gili Matra Marine National Park, Indonesia
Marine Conservation: indocoral.org Dive Centre: 3wdivegili.com Divemaster Internship: 3wdivemaster.com
A camera is placed on the seafloor with bait positioned in front. It records fish that come to investigate over a set time. Footage is reviewed later to identify species and behavior. It’s a passive method like setting a camera trap for marine life.
In short: BRUV = film fish attracted to bait, then analyze the video later.
Divers swim along a transect line and visually record all fish seen within a defined area. They note species, size, and numbers during the dive. It’s a live fish count. Like taking attendance in a moving classroom.
In short: UVC = spot and count fish by eye while swimming the transect.
A measuring tape is laid out along the reef. In our case divers count all visible invertebrates (e.g. sea cucumbers, starfish) within a set belt width usually 1 or 2 meters. They record species and numbers while swimming slowly along the line. It’s a wide-area visual count like sweeping a corridor for invertebrates.
In short: Belt = count all invertebrates within a set zone along the tape.
Divers take multiple photos of coral structures from different angles. Photos are processed using software to build a 3D model of the coral. This model shows shape, size, and changes over time. It’s like creating a digital twin of the coral to track its growth.
In short: 3D = capture coral from all sides, then build a model to monitor changes.
A measuring tape is also laid out along the reef. Instead of recording points manually, divers take overlapping photos along the line. These images are later analyzed on a computer to assess coverage and species. It’s a visual capture method like scanning the reef with a camera for later analysis.
In short: UPT = record the whole transect with photos, then analyze later.
A measuring tape is laid out along the reef. Divers record what’s directly under specific points at fixed intervals (e.g. every 10 cm). It’s a manual, visual sampling method. Like checking what’s beneath each tick mark on a ruler. Data is written down underwater, point by point.
In short: PIT = record what’s under each point by eye, underwater.