Shellfish aquaculture farms as foraging habitat for nearshore fishes and crabs

Author:

Veggerby Karl B.1ORCID,Scheuerell Mark D.2,Sanderson Beth L.3,Kiffney Peter M.3,Ferriss Bridget E.4

Affiliation:

1. School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

2. U.S. Geological Survey, Washington Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

3. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, Fish Ecology Division Seattle Washington USA

4. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service, Alaska Fisheries Science Center, Resource Ecology and Fisheries Management Division Seattle Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveOyster reefs across North America have declined precipitously over the past 140 years. In Washington State, Olympia oyster Ostrea lurida reefs historically provided water filtration and nearshore structural habitat for fishes and invertebrates, but this species is now functionally extinct across its historical range. In place of these naturally occurring reefs, shellfish farms consisting mainly of nonnative Pacific oysters Magallana gigas now occupy patches of nearshore habitat across Washington. These farms modify intertidal substrate by adding structural habitat via suspended oyster grow bags, predator exclusion nets, loose oyster beds, and other shellfish grow‐out gear. As interest and investment in shellfish aquaculture have expanded both locally and globally, so has interest in how these farms modify intertidal habitat and whether the complex structure created by the shellfish and shellfish growing gear provides ecosystem services that are comparable to those of unfarmed areas, such as mudflats and eelgrass meadows.MethodsIn this study, we sought to quantify how shellfish farms are used as foraging habitat for several common nearshore species of fish and crabs in Puget Sound, Washington. We used direct observations of species‐specific behaviors from underwater video to model how habitat type affected observed foraging rates.ResultWe obtained a total of 393 crab observations, 431 demersal fish observations, and 1856 pelagic fish observations across all seven farm sites. Several common species of pelagic fish (e.g., surfperch [Embiotocidae]) used aquaculture‐growing gear more frequently than unfarmed areas as foraging habitat, but Metacarcinus spp. crabs displayed higher foraging frequency in unfarmed mudflats. Species groups such as sculpins (Cottidae) and small flatfish (Pleuronectidae) clearly used specific aquaculture‐growing gear and mudflats in roughly equal proportion.ConclusionOur results indicate that shellfish farms within a larger nearshore habitat mosaic of eelgrass meadows, mudflats, bivalve aquaculture gear, and edge habitat can provide foraging habitat for several species of nearshore fish.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference54 articles.

1. Ecology of Juvenile and Adult Stages of Flatfishes: Distribution and Dynamics of Habitat Associations

2. The Ecosystem Services of Marine Aquaculture: Valuing Benefits to People and Nature

3. American Fisheries Society (AFS). (2014).Use of Fishes in Research Committee (joint committee of the American Fisheries Society the American Institute of Fishery Research Biologists and the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists). Guidelines for the use of fishes in research. American Fisheries Society.

4. Bartoń K.(2022).MuMIn: Multi‐model inference.

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