Half a century of echinoid population decline in the northern Gulf of Aqaba, Red Sea
Data files
Dec 15, 2025 version files 107.22 KB
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Dekel_site_all_years.xlsx
63.04 KB
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Raw_Data_Eilat.csv
42.03 KB
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README.md
2.14 KB
Abstract
In the face of global coral decline, coral reefs in the Gulf of Aqaba, northern Red Sea are considered a coral reef refuge from global warming and acidification, with echinoid herbivory playing a fundamental role in maintaining their balance. Like many echinoderms, echinoids are known for their ‘boom-and-bust’ population fluctuations. However, as population fluctuations are influenced by multiple, complex, and non-linear processes that operate at various temporal scales, short-term studies may fail to capture the true trajectories of population trends. We explored echinoid population dynamics in the Gulf of Aqaba, spanning 15 years (2007 to 2022), complemented by historical data dating back to the 90’s and 70’s. We show that while some species oscillated around a steady mean, others collapsed by up to 98%. Consequently, the once most common herbivores on these reefs currently account for only a fraction of their population size from half a century ago. Increased anthropogenic stress attributed to the accelerated regional urbanization, rather than the direct effect of a single environmental variable, is suggested as a key facilitating driver of the observed declines. This study reveals ongoing, alarming declines of key echinoid species, calling for rapid, species-aware management. We highlight the necessity to transition from year-long to decades-long monitoring to facilitate the detection of ongoing, long-term trends.
Dataset DOI: 10.5061/dryad.bnzs7h4qw
Description of the data and file structure
The dataset contains sea urchin abundance surveyed at the northern Gulf of Aqaba (GOA) from 2007 to 2022. The data files contain species-level abundance on six surveyed sites—North Beach (NB), Kisoski, Dekel, Eilat Coral Nature Reserve (ECNR), the Interuniversity Institute (IUI), and Princess Beach. Due to the diverse structural complexity of the study sites, three surveying methods were utilized: (I) belt-transects, (II) coral assemblages (knolls) surveys, and (III) quadrats. Detailed information on the specific surveying method and effort applied at each site and time can be found in the Supporting Information, Table S1 of the published paper.
Files and variables
File: Dekel_site_all_years.xlsx
Description: Diadema setosum abundance from the Dekel site
Variables
- site: site name
- date: date of survey (MM/DD/YYYY)
- month: month of survey
- year: year of survey
- time: day/night
- transect/knoll no: number of sampling
- m2: square meter
- depth (m): depth of the survey in meters
- Diadema setosum : number of indivduals
- no_m2: number of individuals per square meter
- n/a: not available (data was not recorded)
File: Raw_Data_Eilat.csv
Description: Sea urchin abundance data from six sites at the northern end of the GOA.
Variables
- site: site name
- date: date of survey (DD/MM/YYYY)
- month : month of survey
- year: year of survey
- time: day/night
- transect/knoll no: number of sampling
- m2: square meter
- depth (m): depth of the survey in meters
- Diadema setosum : number of indivduals
- Echinometra EZ: number of indivduals
- Tripneustes gratilla : number of indivduals
- Heterocentrotus mammilatus : number of indivduals
- Echinothrix calamaris : number of indivduals
- Asthenosoma marisrubri: number of indivduals
- Eucidaris metularia: number of indivduals
- Prionocidaris baculosa: number of indivduals
Code/software
n/a
