Seeing the Forest for the Coral-Trees: Engagement and Perceptions of Reef Threats among Coral Restoration Volunteers in Roatan, Honduras

02 January 2024, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

Despite the global proliferation of coral reef restoration initiatives in recent years, there has been little scholarship focused on the motivations, sentiments, or understandings of the volunteer divers that many restoration programs depend on for regular operational support. Mixed-methods analysis of seven months of surveys (n=83) and interviews (n=15) of a heterogeneous population of coral restoration volunteers in Roatan, Honduras explored these themes. Emergent themes around diver motivations, perceptions, and doubts are discussed, and diver-identified actions to protect coral reef health are summarized. Divers involved in coral restoration are shown to not have significantly different perceptions of how much they protect coral reef health than their diving peers not involved in restoration, despite demonstrating a comparatively robust baseline knowledge of coral reef threats and carbon emission related threats in particular. Divers who chose to volunteer for coral restoration identified lowering carbon emissions as a way to protect coral reef health three times more than control group divers, but were not more likely than control divers to list coral restoration. Overall, divers who choose to participate in coral restoration as volunteers demonstrated high baseline awareness of and concern for threats to coral reefs, but consistently reported learning new information from participation in reef restoration.

Keywords

coral restoration
Honduras
Mesoamerican Reef System
Volunteer engagement
Mixed-methods
Perceptions
Coral reef threats

Supplementary materials

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All Surveys Summary
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Summary of dates when each participant completed their initial survey, follow up survey (if applicable), and semi-structured interview (if applicable). Also notes any discrepancies or errors in the participant's data at any point (used to apply corrections detailed in Appendix 3).
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Blank Surveys (English + Spanish)
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Appendix 1: The blank surveys exported from Google Forms, ordered as A) Initial Survey, English (pgs 1-7); B) Initial Survey, Spanish (pgs 8-14); C) Follow-Up Survey, English (pgs 15-19); and D) Follow-Up Survey, Spanish (pgs 20-23).
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Semi-Structured Interview Protocol (English + Spanish)
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Appendix 2: Semi-structured interview protocol (English) and questions (English and Spanish).
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Atlas.ti Data Import Description
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Appendix 3: Details exporting the survey response data into Atlas.ti; correcting response errors identified in "All Surveys Summary" sheet; and renaming groups for qualitative analysis.
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Semi-Structured Interview Consent Forms (English + Spanish)
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Appendix 4: Text of digital consent forms interview participants read and completed via Google Form before interviews. Includes consent to record conversation and to anonymously quote from the interviews in a research context.
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