1 / 17

Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling

Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling. P.A.G. Barnes Ecological Interactions Research Program Centre for Shellfish Research Malaspina University-College. Particulate Deposition Rates, Sediment Geochemistry and Benthic Faunal Communities Associated with a

yair
Download Presentation

Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling P.A.G. BarnesEcological Interactions Research Program Centre for Shellfish ResearchMalaspina University-College Particulate Deposition Rates, Sediment Geochemistry and Benthic Faunal Communities Associated with a Deep-water, Suspended Pacific Oyster Farm in BC

  2. Cultured bivalves filter feed on naturally occurring phytoplankton • Fine suspended material is packaged into larger feces and • pseudofeces (biodeposits) • Potential benthic impacts: • increased aerobic microbial activity • low → no oxygen • increased anaerobic microbial activity • negative oxidation-reduction potential & increased sulphide accumulation • decreased species diversity

  3. the size and nature of the farm • - culture species, stocking density, overall • production, biomass • site characteristics • - hydrography, bathymetry, primary productivity • fouling communities on the raft structures • mortality and fall-off of cultured bivalves and • fouling organisms Seasonal variation in some of these factors may be reflected in seasonal variation in biodeposition

  4. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling BC Aquaculture Research & Development Committee (BCARDC) • Objectives: • 1. to quantify particulate matter (feces, pseudofeces) • and sloughed material produced at deep-water, suspended • Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) raft culture sites in BC; • to quantify particulate material arriving on the seafloor per • unit time (deposition rate) below the C. gigas rafts, • adjacent to the farms, and at reference stations; • to measure water currents and water column variables • which may affect biodeposit production rates and • deposition rates at C. gigas study sites;

  5. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling • Objectives: • 4. to investigate the effects of deposition from C. gigas farms • on sediment physical and geochemical parameters; • 5. to investigate the effects of deposition from C. gigas farms • on benthic faunal communities during a period of maximum productivity.

  6. Village Bay, Quadra Island

  7. Field work • July 2003 to Aug. 2004 • sampling every 3 months • Oyster density • 183 oysters ∙m-3 Schematic – B. Kingzett

  8. ← ← ← ←

  9. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling – Particulate Biodeposition Figure 59 a-e. Total organic carbon deposition rates (g·m-2·d-1) (mean +/- SD) (shallow and deep) for all Village Bay stations, all dates.

  10. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling – Sediment Geochemistry Village Bay Figure 66 a-d. Village Bay sediment percent total organic matter (without woodfibre) (mean +/-SD) for all stations, all dates.

  11. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling – Sediment Geochemistry Village Bay Figure 67 a-d. Village Bay sediment redox (mV) (mean +/- SD) for all stations, all dates.

  12. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling – Sediment Geochemistry Village Bay Figure 68 a-d. Village Bay sediment free sulphide (µM) (mean +/- SD) for all stations, all dates.

  13. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling – Benthic Infauna Swartz Dominance Index (SDI) measures the number of species that comprise ~75% of the sample. A high SDI value indicates that abundance is spread relatively evenly over a variety of species. A low SDI indicates that a few taxa dominate the community.

  14. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling Summary of Major Results – Village Bay • Deposition rates • significantly higher at the raft station (S3) than reference • stations on most dates • Sediment geochemical characteristics • %TOM at S3 was significantly different (but not always • higher) compared to %TOM at RS1 or RS2 • redox values at S3 were not significantly different from • those at RS1 or RS2 • free sulphides at S3 were significantly higher than • those at RS1 or RS2 in July 2003

  15. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling Summary of Major Results – Village Bay • Sediment infaunal invertebrate communities • no indication of infaunal impoverishment at raft • station • infaunal community at the raft station was distinct • from those at other stations (hard substrate fauna, • differences in dominant bivalves and polychaetes)

  16. Acknowledgements: Funding: BC Aquaculture Research and Development Committee Advanced Systems Institute (BCIC) NSERC Canada Research Chair Assistance: Julia Rendall, Bee Islets Co-op Brian Stevenson, Viking Bay Ventures BCSGA CSR – D. Tillapaugh, S. Switzer,W. Friesen, A.Perkovich,S.Williams, K. Hunter, N. Plamondon, D.Dalziel, D. Paltzat MU-C Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture - Gord Edmondson, Jenny Dawson-Coates Kingzett Professional Services BCMAFF - Dr. Bill Heath DFO - Institute of Ocean Sciences

  17. Shellfish Culture and Particulate Matter Production and Cycling – Benthic Infauna VB-S1 VB-S2 VB-S4 VB-RS1 VB-RS2 VB-S5 VB-S3 ^Parvilucina tenuisculpta ^Acila castrensis ^Axinopsida serricata ^ ^ ^ * ^ * ^ Acila castrensis Axinopsida serricata Rochefortia tumida, Tectura persona & hard subtrate fauna Figure 72. Village Bay July 2003 - SIGTREE analysis for faunal abundance data dendogram (replicates averaged for each station). (<0.025)

More Related