Many divers damage coral,
but are some more likely than
others to do so? In this study,
published last year in the journal
Biological Conservation, we see
who the culprits are. Undercurrent has substantially edited the study
and we take all responsibility for
any changes.
* * * * *
Divers damage corals with
their hands, body, equipment,
and fins. Although the damage is
often minor, the cumulative
effects can cause significant localized
destruction. Studies have
shown that individual divers vary
greatly in the damage they cause.
In a 1990 study by Helen Talge of
206 divers in the Florida Keys
(reported in Undercurrent), about
ninety percent had one or more
physical interactions with reef benthos,
but fewer than two percent
actually damaged corals. Variation in competence, the activities
pursued, the extent of predive
instruction, waves and currents,
and site characteristics affect the
frequency with which divers contact
and break fragile coral.
Anecdotal accounts suggest that
underwater photographers are
particularly problematic.
Identifying simple
risk factors
Our study involved independent
observations of 214 divers visiting
the Great Barrier Reef in an
area with a large covering of
branching corals. For ten minutes
we observed how often each diver
contacted the substratum, broke
or damaged corals, and kicked
up sediments. Contact or damage
was classified according to
whether it was made by the
diver’s hands, fins, knees,
gauges, or other equipment,
and by the type of substratum
involved. Then, fifty-nine divers
(thirty-three males, twenty-six
females) were issued a Kodak
Fun Flash (a single-use camera)
at the start of the diving
day, ostensibly as a prize for
booking a dive trip with the
charter operator.
Results
Of the 214 divers observed
during the first part of the
study, 150 (seventy percent) came
into direct physical contact with
benthic substrata during the tenminute
period. On average, each
diver made 5.4 contacts. Most
contacts were fin kicks (fifty-eight
percent) or resulted from deliberately
holding on to corals (thirtytwo
percent). Thirty-two divers
(fifteen percent) broke corals,
with fin kicks the major cause of
damage (ninety-five percent).
Overall, the mean number of
damaging contacts per diver was
relatively small (0.4 contacts per
ten minutes). There was no
correlation between the diver’s experience and the number of
times divers contacted or damaged
corals. Experienced divers
were just as likely to damage
coral as inexperienced divers.
Usually, divers were most likely
to break corals in the first ten
minutes of a dive, and damage
was more likely to be caused by
male divers than by female
divers. Female divers made proportionately
fewer fin contacts
than males, but were more likely
to touch corals and other substrata
with their hands.
Thirty-nine of the 214 divers
(eighteen percent) used a camera
during the observed dive.
While similar proportions of photographers
and nonphotographers
broke corals, photographers
who did break corals
caused more damage (1.6 breaks
in ten minutes) than divers without
cameras (0.3 breaks).
Specialized underwater
photographers who
use bulkier and more
expensive camera
equipment were the most
damaging of all the
divers we observed. |
Effects of cameras and
gender on diver behavior
In the second part of the
study, fifty-nine divers were given
cameras; they had variously completed
between two and 200
dives. Use of a camera had no
detectable influence on the rate
at which they contacted or damaged
corals. However, male divers
with cameras were more likely to
break corals, and they caused
significantly more damage than
female divers. Again, female divers were more likely to hold or to
touch benthic substrata than their
male counterparts, and divers who
did touch tended to be more experienced
than those who did not touch
the bottom with their hands.
Discussion:
The divers who were issued
cameras were characteristic of the
increasing number of dive tourists
who purchase and use cheap, singleuse
cameras. They were relatively
naive underwater photographers
who may not have developed the
specialized behaviors exhibited by
more experienced diving photographers.
The experiment showed that
the normal dive behavior and
impacts caused by naive divers were
not unduly affected by use of an
underwater camera. In the hands of
relatively naive divers, the cameras
do not necessarily create a greater
risk of damage to sensitive dive
locations.
More specialized underwater
photographers typically use bulkier
and more expensive camera equipment.
These divers, represented in
the first part of our study, were the
most damaging of all the divers we
observed. They often attempted to
steady themselves on the substratum
while taking a photograph. Although
this did not lead to more contact
with living organisms, the physical
contacts that they made caused more
damage than those made by nonphotographers.
As individuals get more committed
to underwater photography,
their level of personal and financial
investment increases. They become
increasingly directed toward achieving
their photography goals, which
can occurs at the expense of their
personal values. For example, many
exercise less caution about damaging
fragile corals. Experienced underwater
photographers make evaluations
about appropriate behaviors based
on their own knowledge and values.
They may be less likely to modify
their behavior if it means not meeting their photography goals, particularly
if they perceive that the
damage that they may cause is relatively
minor.
Our data suggest, however,
that the greatest risk of impacts
occurs at sites with a large cover
of fragile organisms, and during
the first ten minutes of a dive,
when the divers are adjusting
their buoyancy.
Gender differences were the
most consistent finding. Male and
female divers display distinctly
different underwater behaviors,
with women contacting the reef
significantly less than their male
counterparts. They were more
cautious about venturing close to
the substratum, and when they
did so were more likely to use
their hands rather than their fins
to support themselves.
This is consistent with other
studies of the environmental
attitudes and behavior of male
and female recreationists, which
have shown that men tend to be
more adventurous and more
likely to take risks than women,
less likely to follow instructions,
and have a greater propensity
toward delinquent behavior. Our
observations suggest that males in
a mixed-gender “buddy-pair” also
usually led the dive and were
more likely to enter caves and
overhangs, where there is a
greater chance of physical contact
with the substratum.
There were no strong relationships
between dive experience
and damage. However, another
study has found that less experienced
divers were generally more
cautious, and therefore were less
likely to get into situations where
they might damage corals, while
another found that divers with
more advanced levels of training
made fewer impacts.
Recommendations:
Our findings should allow
divemasters to target on-site management of divers more effectively
so that they reduce the risk of
impacts. This may involve giving
more explicit predive warnings to
male divers and specialist underwater
photographers about the
extra care they should take during
their dives, particularly in the first
ten minutes. Briefings are likely to
be more effective if they stress the
potential for cumulative damage
from the relatively minor effects
of many individual divers, rather
than by simply focusing on elements
of individual behavior.
Other approaches could
include provision of safe entry
and exit points that allow divers
to correct their buoyancy without
causing damage before they
proceed to more sensitive areas
of the site, and by visiting particularly
sensitive dive sites later in
the trip, once divers have
become familiar with their equipment
and surroundings.
A. B. Rouphael, G. J. Inglis, School of
Tropical Environment Studies and
Geography and CRC Reef Research
Centre, Janes Cood University,
Townsville 4811, Australia “Take only
photographs and leave only footprints?”
This article discusses an experimental
study of the impacts of underwater
photographers on coral reef dive sites.
Biological Conservation 100(2001) 281-287.