Resilience of dynamic coastal benthic ecosystems in response to large-scale finfish farming

Global expansion of salmon aquaculture is contingent upon finding new, large-capacity farming locations that are, increasingly, situated in dispersive environments with atypical ecological characteristics. The capacity of such sites to assimilate organic waste and the type and spatial extent of effe...

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Main Authors: Keeley, N, Valdemarsen, T, Woodcock, S, Holmer, M, Husa, V, Bannister, R
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Inter-Research 2019-04-01
Series:Aquaculture Environment Interactions
Online Access:https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v11/p161-179/
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spelling doaj-539dba1f683149cea9dfe5e650672fae2020-11-25T02:33:19ZengInter-ResearchAquaculture Environment Interactions1869-215X1869-75342019-04-011116117910.3354/aei00301Resilience of dynamic coastal benthic ecosystems in response to large-scale finfish farmingKeeley, NValdemarsen, TWoodcock, SHolmer, MHusa, VBannister, RGlobal expansion of salmon aquaculture is contingent upon finding new, large-capacity farming locations that are, increasingly, situated in dispersive environments with atypical ecological characteristics. The capacity of such sites to assimilate organic waste and the type and spatial extent of effects remain poorly understood. This study couples intensive spatial and temporal measurements of waste outputs with measurements of benthic ecological diversity and sediment biogeochemistry at a shallow dispersive site on the central west coast of Norway. Despite minimal visual changes to the seabed, pronounced biological effects were evident out to 600-1000 m away from the farm. Greatly enhanced faunal and microbial activity was tightly coupled with strong sediment respiratory responses in the form of oxygen uptake and ammonia efflux. The benthic response was highly dynamic, with rapid and prolific colonization by opportunistic fauna, followed by substantive recovery during the subsequent 7 mo fallowing period. The fate and pathways of farm waste through the environment was compartmentalized by converting measured parameters into equivalent carbon fluxes. During early production, approximately 30-40% of the waste was accounted for by the measured benthic processes, attributed to faunal respiratory activity and the physical properties including sediment type. Later in the production cycle, a sediment burial event was observed down-current from the farm. The remaining 60-70% of organic waste was assumed to be either assimilated in the water column, consumed by large, unquantified benthic fauna, or exported and dispersed. Shallow, dispersive sites therefore appear relatively resilient to acute near-field enrichment, but are also more likely to result in accumulative, far-field effects.https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v11/p161-179/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Keeley, N
Valdemarsen, T
Woodcock, S
Holmer, M
Husa, V
Bannister, R
spellingShingle Keeley, N
Valdemarsen, T
Woodcock, S
Holmer, M
Husa, V
Bannister, R
Resilience of dynamic coastal benthic ecosystems in response to large-scale finfish farming
Aquaculture Environment Interactions
author_facet Keeley, N
Valdemarsen, T
Woodcock, S
Holmer, M
Husa, V
Bannister, R
author_sort Keeley, N
title Resilience of dynamic coastal benthic ecosystems in response to large-scale finfish farming
title_short Resilience of dynamic coastal benthic ecosystems in response to large-scale finfish farming
title_full Resilience of dynamic coastal benthic ecosystems in response to large-scale finfish farming
title_fullStr Resilience of dynamic coastal benthic ecosystems in response to large-scale finfish farming
title_full_unstemmed Resilience of dynamic coastal benthic ecosystems in response to large-scale finfish farming
title_sort resilience of dynamic coastal benthic ecosystems in response to large-scale finfish farming
publisher Inter-Research
series Aquaculture Environment Interactions
issn 1869-215X
1869-7534
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Global expansion of salmon aquaculture is contingent upon finding new, large-capacity farming locations that are, increasingly, situated in dispersive environments with atypical ecological characteristics. The capacity of such sites to assimilate organic waste and the type and spatial extent of effects remain poorly understood. This study couples intensive spatial and temporal measurements of waste outputs with measurements of benthic ecological diversity and sediment biogeochemistry at a shallow dispersive site on the central west coast of Norway. Despite minimal visual changes to the seabed, pronounced biological effects were evident out to 600-1000 m away from the farm. Greatly enhanced faunal and microbial activity was tightly coupled with strong sediment respiratory responses in the form of oxygen uptake and ammonia efflux. The benthic response was highly dynamic, with rapid and prolific colonization by opportunistic fauna, followed by substantive recovery during the subsequent 7 mo fallowing period. The fate and pathways of farm waste through the environment was compartmentalized by converting measured parameters into equivalent carbon fluxes. During early production, approximately 30-40% of the waste was accounted for by the measured benthic processes, attributed to faunal respiratory activity and the physical properties including sediment type. Later in the production cycle, a sediment burial event was observed down-current from the farm. The remaining 60-70% of organic waste was assumed to be either assimilated in the water column, consumed by large, unquantified benthic fauna, or exported and dispersed. Shallow, dispersive sites therefore appear relatively resilient to acute near-field enrichment, but are also more likely to result in accumulative, far-field effects.
url https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/aei/v11/p161-179/
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