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Environmental impact monitoring of household vinegar-injections to cull crown-of-thorns starfish, Acanthaster spp.

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Environmental impact monitoring of household vinegar-injections to cull crown-of-thorns starfish, Acanthaster spp. / Bostrom Einarsson, Lisa; Bonin, Mary C.; Moon, Steve et al.
In: Ocean and Coastal Management, Vol. 155, 01.04.2018, p. 83-89.

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Bostrom Einarsson L, Bonin MC, Moon S, Firth S. Environmental impact monitoring of household vinegar-injections to cull crown-of-thorns starfish, Acanthaster spp. Ocean and Coastal Management. 2018 Apr 1;155:83-89. Epub 2018 Feb 13. doi: 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2018.01.023

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Bostrom Einarsson, Lisa ; Bonin, Mary C. ; Moon, Steve et al. / Environmental impact monitoring of household vinegar-injections to cull crown-of-thorns starfish, Acanthaster spp. In: Ocean and Coastal Management. 2018 ; Vol. 155. pp. 83-89.

Bibtex

@article{8fb14874cc71424da0884b08dc3bbdac,
title = "Environmental impact monitoring of household vinegar-injections to cull crown-of-thorns starfish, Acanthaster spp.",
abstract = "Large-scale population outbreaks of the crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS, Acanthaster spp.) have occurred in every nation with substantial coral reefs in the Indo-Pacific during the past few decades. While a multitude of control efforts have been trialed to combat the outbreaks, an efficient solution has remained elusive. Recent developments have however introduced single-shot injection methods using bovine derivatives (bile salts) and household products (vinegar) that have proven effective at culling COTS. In this study we use a Multiple-Before-After-Control-Impact (MBACI) experimental design to conduct an assessment of the environmental impact of using household vinegar as a chemical for culling COTS. During our six-week assessment we found no changes in coral cover or coral disease. Furthermore, while video recordings documented a number of fish species consuming decaying COTS, we found no evidence of changes in fish abundance or the presence of fish disease, despite densities of injected COTS far exceeding those recorded during natural outbreaks. The efficiency of scavenging fish ensured that few traces of decaying COTS were visible 72 h post-injection. The lack of any observed environmental impact supports our conclusion that vinegar is a low-risk chemical for use in COTS control. Because vinegar is highly accessible, low in cost, and effective at killing COTS without harm to non-target organisms, it has the potential to become a powerful new tool to defend the reef against COTS outbreaks.",
keywords = "COTS, Outbreak, Vinegar, MBACI, Impact assessment",
author = "{Bostrom Einarsson}, Lisa and Bonin, {Mary C.} and Steve Moon and Scott Firth",
year = "2018",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2018.01.023",
language = "English",
volume = "155",
pages = "83--89",
journal = "Ocean and Coastal Management",
issn = "0964-5691",
publisher = "TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Environmental impact monitoring of household vinegar-injections to cull crown-of-thorns starfish, Acanthaster spp.

AU - Bostrom Einarsson, Lisa

AU - Bonin, Mary C.

AU - Moon, Steve

AU - Firth, Scott

PY - 2018/4/1

Y1 - 2018/4/1

N2 - Large-scale population outbreaks of the crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS, Acanthaster spp.) have occurred in every nation with substantial coral reefs in the Indo-Pacific during the past few decades. While a multitude of control efforts have been trialed to combat the outbreaks, an efficient solution has remained elusive. Recent developments have however introduced single-shot injection methods using bovine derivatives (bile salts) and household products (vinegar) that have proven effective at culling COTS. In this study we use a Multiple-Before-After-Control-Impact (MBACI) experimental design to conduct an assessment of the environmental impact of using household vinegar as a chemical for culling COTS. During our six-week assessment we found no changes in coral cover or coral disease. Furthermore, while video recordings documented a number of fish species consuming decaying COTS, we found no evidence of changes in fish abundance or the presence of fish disease, despite densities of injected COTS far exceeding those recorded during natural outbreaks. The efficiency of scavenging fish ensured that few traces of decaying COTS were visible 72 h post-injection. The lack of any observed environmental impact supports our conclusion that vinegar is a low-risk chemical for use in COTS control. Because vinegar is highly accessible, low in cost, and effective at killing COTS without harm to non-target organisms, it has the potential to become a powerful new tool to defend the reef against COTS outbreaks.

AB - Large-scale population outbreaks of the crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS, Acanthaster spp.) have occurred in every nation with substantial coral reefs in the Indo-Pacific during the past few decades. While a multitude of control efforts have been trialed to combat the outbreaks, an efficient solution has remained elusive. Recent developments have however introduced single-shot injection methods using bovine derivatives (bile salts) and household products (vinegar) that have proven effective at culling COTS. In this study we use a Multiple-Before-After-Control-Impact (MBACI) experimental design to conduct an assessment of the environmental impact of using household vinegar as a chemical for culling COTS. During our six-week assessment we found no changes in coral cover or coral disease. Furthermore, while video recordings documented a number of fish species consuming decaying COTS, we found no evidence of changes in fish abundance or the presence of fish disease, despite densities of injected COTS far exceeding those recorded during natural outbreaks. The efficiency of scavenging fish ensured that few traces of decaying COTS were visible 72 h post-injection. The lack of any observed environmental impact supports our conclusion that vinegar is a low-risk chemical for use in COTS control. Because vinegar is highly accessible, low in cost, and effective at killing COTS without harm to non-target organisms, it has the potential to become a powerful new tool to defend the reef against COTS outbreaks.

KW - COTS

KW - Outbreak

KW - Vinegar

KW - MBACI

KW - Impact assessment

U2 - 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2018.01.023

DO - 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2018.01.023

M3 - Journal article

VL - 155

SP - 83

EP - 89

JO - Ocean and Coastal Management

JF - Ocean and Coastal Management

SN - 0964-5691

ER -