On the edge: assessing fish habitat use across the boundary between Pacific oyster aquaculture and eelgrass in Willapa Bay, Washington, USA

Estuaries are subject to diverse anthropogenic stressors, such as shellfish aquaculture, which involve extensive use of estuarine tidelands. Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas aquaculture is a century-old practice in US West Coast estuaries that contributes significantly to the regional culture and ec...

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Main Authors: KA Muething, F Tomas, G Waldbusser, BR Dumbauld
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Inter-Research 2020-12-01
Series:Aquaculture Environment Interactions
Online Access:https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v12/p541-557/
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spelling doaj-e81ff26a4edf467c90fc1124ab832ac92021-07-07T08:40:43ZengInter-ResearchAquaculture Environment Interactions1869-215X1869-75342020-12-011254155710.3354/aei00381On the edge: assessing fish habitat use across the boundary between Pacific oyster aquaculture and eelgrass in Willapa Bay, Washington, USAKA Muething0F Tomas1G Waldbusser2BR Dumbauld3College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USAInstituto Mediterráneo de Estudios Avanzados (IMEDEA), 07190 Esporles, Illes Balears, SpainCollege of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USAAgricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Newport, OR 97365, USAEstuaries are subject to diverse anthropogenic stressors, such as shellfish aquaculture, which involve extensive use of estuarine tidelands. Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas aquaculture is a century-old practice in US West Coast estuaries that contributes significantly to the regional culture and economy. Native eelgrass Zostera marina also commonly occurs in intertidal areas where oyster aquaculture is practiced. Eelgrass is federally protected in the USA as ‘essential fish habitat’, restricting aquaculture activities within or near eelgrass. To contribute scientific information useful for management decisions, we sought to compare fish habitat use of oyster aquaculture and eelgrass, as well as the edges between these 2 habitats, in Willapa Bay, Washington, USA. Furthermore, given a recent shift towards off-bottom culture methods, in part to protect seagrasses, long-line and on-bottom oyster aquaculture habitats were compared. A combination of direct (underwater video, minnow traps) and indirect (predation tethering units, eelgrass surveys) methods were employed to characterize differences in fish habitat use. Eelgrass density declined within both aquaculture habitats but less so within long-line aquaculture. Most fish species in our study used long-line oyster aquaculture and eelgrass habitats similarly with minimal edge effects, and on-bottom aquaculture was used less than either of the other 2 habitat types. These results are consistent with previously observed positive relationships between fish abundance and vertical habitat structure, but also reveal species-specific behavior; larger mesopredators like Pacific staghorn sculpins were sighted more often in aquaculture than in interior eelgrass habitats.https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v12/p541-557/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author KA Muething
F Tomas
G Waldbusser
BR Dumbauld
spellingShingle KA Muething
F Tomas
G Waldbusser
BR Dumbauld
On the edge: assessing fish habitat use across the boundary between Pacific oyster aquaculture and eelgrass in Willapa Bay, Washington, USA
Aquaculture Environment Interactions
author_facet KA Muething
F Tomas
G Waldbusser
BR Dumbauld
author_sort KA Muething
title On the edge: assessing fish habitat use across the boundary between Pacific oyster aquaculture and eelgrass in Willapa Bay, Washington, USA
title_short On the edge: assessing fish habitat use across the boundary between Pacific oyster aquaculture and eelgrass in Willapa Bay, Washington, USA
title_full On the edge: assessing fish habitat use across the boundary between Pacific oyster aquaculture and eelgrass in Willapa Bay, Washington, USA
title_fullStr On the edge: assessing fish habitat use across the boundary between Pacific oyster aquaculture and eelgrass in Willapa Bay, Washington, USA
title_full_unstemmed On the edge: assessing fish habitat use across the boundary between Pacific oyster aquaculture and eelgrass in Willapa Bay, Washington, USA
title_sort on the edge: assessing fish habitat use across the boundary between pacific oyster aquaculture and eelgrass in willapa bay, washington, usa
publisher Inter-Research
series Aquaculture Environment Interactions
issn 1869-215X
1869-7534
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Estuaries are subject to diverse anthropogenic stressors, such as shellfish aquaculture, which involve extensive use of estuarine tidelands. Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas aquaculture is a century-old practice in US West Coast estuaries that contributes significantly to the regional culture and economy. Native eelgrass Zostera marina also commonly occurs in intertidal areas where oyster aquaculture is practiced. Eelgrass is federally protected in the USA as ‘essential fish habitat’, restricting aquaculture activities within or near eelgrass. To contribute scientific information useful for management decisions, we sought to compare fish habitat use of oyster aquaculture and eelgrass, as well as the edges between these 2 habitats, in Willapa Bay, Washington, USA. Furthermore, given a recent shift towards off-bottom culture methods, in part to protect seagrasses, long-line and on-bottom oyster aquaculture habitats were compared. A combination of direct (underwater video, minnow traps) and indirect (predation tethering units, eelgrass surveys) methods were employed to characterize differences in fish habitat use. Eelgrass density declined within both aquaculture habitats but less so within long-line aquaculture. Most fish species in our study used long-line oyster aquaculture and eelgrass habitats similarly with minimal edge effects, and on-bottom aquaculture was used less than either of the other 2 habitat types. These results are consistent with previously observed positive relationships between fish abundance and vertical habitat structure, but also reveal species-specific behavior; larger mesopredators like Pacific staghorn sculpins were sighted more often in aquaculture than in interior eelgrass habitats.
url https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v12/p541-557/
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