karen kesler , vincent politano , kennedy paynter

15
Karen Kesler, Vincent Politano, Kennedy Paynter Differentiating the impact of the physical and biotic components of the eastern oyster, Crassostea virginica, on the benthic reef community

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Differentiating the impact of the physical and biotic components of the eastern oyster, Crassostea virginica , on the benthic reef community . Karen Kesler , Vincent Politano , Kennedy Paynter. The physical and biotic contributions of Crassostrea virginica. Physical Structure: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Karen Kesler, Vincent Politano, Kennedy Paynter

Differentiating the impact of the physical and biotic components of the eastern oyster,

Crassostea virginica, on the benthic reef community

Page 2: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

The physical and biotic contributions of Crassostrea virginica

• Physical Structure:• Hard surface for settlement• Complex arrangement of oyster shells (Luckenbach et al. 2005)

• Complexity correlated with higher biomass, abundance, and species richness (Cranfield et al 2004, Coen et al. 2007)

• Reduces turbidity (Meyer and Townsend 2000)

•Biotic Input:• Benthic-pelagic couplers• Biodeposit production

Page 3: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Past Research

• Tolley and Volety 2005: C. virginica • No overall difference between live and shell treatments• Some species level differences

• Silver Botts et al. 1996: Dreissena spp • no differences in amphipods, turbellarians, and

hydrozoans abundances• Chironomid abundance higher on live mussels

• Stewart et al. 1998: Dreissena spp • macroinvertebrate biomass higher on live mussels

Page 4: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Question and Hypotheses

• Is the Crassostrea virginica reef community predominantly responding to the presence of the oyster structure or is there an additional response to the biotic component of a live oyster?

• Ho: The two treatments will have equal abundance and biomass. • May indicate structure as the dominating influence

• HA: The live oyster treatment will have higher abundance and/or biomass. • May indicate an additional benefit of live oyster

Page 5: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Methods

• In July 2009, eighty C. virginica clumps were collected from the Chester River, MD

• Clumps were cleaned of all epibiotics

• Half of the clumps were shucked and glued shut to reassemble the structure of a live oyster

• 4 clumps were zip tied to a 57.8 cm2 tray

• 10 trays of live oysters and 10 trays of oyster shell of equal complexity were deployed into the Patuxent River, MD

• Trays were placed 3 m apart in a 12 m by 15 m grid

Page 6: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Methods • In October 2009 three trays of each treatment were

removed for a mid-experiment evaluation

• Oysters and epifauna were preserved in ethanol • Epifauna were cleaned from the oysters, identified,

enumerated, and biomassed• ANOVA with an adjusted alpha was performed

Page 7: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Results: Least Abundant Taxa

0100200300400500600700800900

1000 LiveOyster Shell

Taxa

Abu

ndan

ce p

er tr

ay

Page 8: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Results: Most Abundant Taxa

polychaeta amphipoda platyhelminthes copepoda0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000LiveOyster Shell

Taxa

Abu

ndan

ce p

er tr

ay

Page 9: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Results: Taxa with Lowest Biomass

cirrip

edia

bivalv

ia

polyc

haeta

amphip

oda

actini

aria

platyh

elmin.

..misc

.

gastr

opoda

cope

poda

xanth

oidea

isopod

a

shrim

p0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8Live Oyster Shell

Taxa

Dry

bio

mas

s per

tray

(g)

Page 10: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Results: Taxa with Highest Biomass

teleostei tunicata0

1

2

3

4

5

6LiveOyster Shell

Taxa

Dry

bio

mas

s per

tray

(g)

Page 11: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Discussion

• No difference in reef community biomass or abundance• Structure may have been a stronger influence on

community development than the biotic component • Tidal movement and wave action may have influenced

results

Page 12: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

What’s Next ?

• Remaining 14 trays moved to deeper water in November 2009• Reduced influence of tidal and wave action

• Removed in July 2010• Currently processing trays• New data will present a more refined data set

Page 13: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Acknowledgements

• Paynter Lab staff and students• Kyle Rambo: Naval Air Station, Patuxent River• Oyster Recovery Partnership (ORP)• National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration –

Chesapeake Bay Office (NCBO)• Army Corps of Engineers, Baltimore District

Page 14: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

References

• Coen, LD, RD Brumbaugh, D Bushek, R Grizzel, MW Luckenbach, MH Posey, SP Powers, and SG Tolley. 2007. Ecosystem services related to oyster restoration. Marine Ecology Progress Series 341: 303-307.

• Cranfield, HJ, AA Rowden, DJ Smith, DP Gordon, and KP Michael. 2004. Macrofaunal assemblages of benthic habitat of different complexity and the proposition of a model of biogenic reef habitat regeneration in Foveaux Strait, New Zealand. Journal of Sea Research 52: 109- 125.

• Luckenbach, MW, LD Coen, PG Ross, Jr. and JA Stephen. 2005. Oyster reef habitat restoration: relationships between oyster abundance and community development based on two studies in Virginia and South Carolina. Journal of Coastal Research 40: 64-78.

• Meyer, DL, and EC Townsend. 2000. Faunal utilization of created intertidal eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) reefs in the southeastern United States. Estuaries 23(1): 34-45.

• Silver Botts,P, BA Patterson and DW Schloesser. 1996. Zebra mussel effects on benthic invertebrates: physical or biotic? Journal of the North American Benthological Society 15(2): 179-184.

• Stewart, TW, JG Miner, and RL Lowe. 1998. Quantifying mechanisms for zebra mussel effects on benthic macroinvertebrates: organic matter production and shell-generated habitat. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 17(1): 81-94.

• Tolley, SG and AK Volety. 2005. The role of oysters in habitat use of oyster reefs by resident fishes and decapod crustaceans.  Journal of Shellfish Research 24(4):  1007-1012.

Page 15: Karen  Kesler , Vincent  Politano , Kennedy  Paynter

Questions?