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Application of biotic and abiotic indicators for detecting benthic impacts of marine salmonid farming among coastal regions of Tasmania

Authors :
Edgar, Graham J.
Davey, Adam
Shepherd, Colin
Source :
Aquaculture. Sep2010, Vol. 307 Issue 3/4, p212-218. 7p.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Abstract: Analysis of sediment and macrofaunal samples collected during the Tasmanian marine farming finfish monitoring program – a six-year partnership between industry, management and researchers – revealed several univariate indicators to be useful for detecting effects of aquaculture on the benthic environment. Comparisons with reference sites revealed a significant decline in sediment redox potential to at least 4cm depth at farm sites, and increased proportional abundance of capitellids and decreased bivalve/total mollusc ratio. At compliance sites located 35m out from lease boundaries, sediment redox potential and faunal assemblage composition were intermediate between patterns found at farm and reference sites. Redox potential at the sediment surface declined on average by 178eV at reference sites converted to farm sites, with this indicator proving the most sensitive for detecting regional impacts of farming activity. Fish farm effects that extended to regional scales could not be adequately assessed within the project because reference regions without fish farms were not monitored; however, a significant decrease through time at reference and compliance sites in surface redox potential, and increases in sediment organic matter and total macrofaunal abundance, were suggestive that organic enrichment may have extended at low levels across regional scales. Given the implications to biodiversity conservation of region-wide impacts and a need to distinguish fish farm effects from unrelated long-term environmental change, monitoring of reference sites in regions lacking fish farms is urgently needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00448486
Volume :
307
Issue :
3/4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Aquaculture
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
53405696
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2010.07.018