Antecedent Geologic Controls on the Distribution of Oyster Reefs in Copano Bay, Texas

Copano Bay is a shallow (< 2-3 m), microtidal estuary in south central Texas. In an effort to both determine the distribution as well as investigate the controls on the distribution of oyster reefs, a geophysical survey of Copano Bay was conducted in June and July 2007. Surficial sediment analys...

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Main Author: Piper, Erin Alynn
Other Authors: Dellapenna, Timothy
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-05-7930
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2010-05-79302013-01-08T10:42:07ZAntecedent Geologic Controls on the Distribution of Oyster Reefs in Copano Bay, TexasPiper, Erin AlynnOyster ReefEstuarysedimentationgeologygeologic controlsbottom typeCopano Bay is a shallow (< 2-3 m), microtidal estuary in south central Texas. In an effort to both determine the distribution as well as investigate the controls on the distribution of oyster reefs, a geophysical survey of Copano Bay was conducted in June and July 2007. Surficial sediment analysis confirms that the recent sedimentation in Copano Bay is comprised of mostly estuarine mud with little sand or shell, large extents of oyster reefs and smaller areas of sand. Seismic stratigraphy analyses verify that the first oyster reefs in Copano Bay formed atop topographic highs in the Pleistocene surface. About 6 ka, sea level rise slowed to near its present rate and sediment supply decreased tremendously to Copano Bay decreasing the amount of suspended sediment. The first oyster reefs began forming around this time using these fluvial terraces as suitable substrate. Once the initial reefs were established, additional reefs began forming atop these initial reefs, or on the eroded shell hash material from the initial reefs. During this time of slow sea level rise and low sediment input to the bay, oyster reefs thrived and reef and shell hash material covered a majority of the bay surface. Once climate change increased sediment input to the bay, the reefs began to decrease in size due to siltation. The reefs have continued to decrease in size causing a 64 percent reduction in oyster reef and shell hash area from approximately 4.8 ka to today.Dellapenna, Timothy2011-08-08T22:48:05Z2011-08-09T01:29:23Z2011-08-08T22:48:05Z2011-08-09T01:29:23Z2010-052011-08-08May 2010thesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-05-7930en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Oyster Reef
Estuary
sedimentation
geology
geologic controls
bottom type
spellingShingle Oyster Reef
Estuary
sedimentation
geology
geologic controls
bottom type
Piper, Erin Alynn
Antecedent Geologic Controls on the Distribution of Oyster Reefs in Copano Bay, Texas
description Copano Bay is a shallow (< 2-3 m), microtidal estuary in south central Texas. In an effort to both determine the distribution as well as investigate the controls on the distribution of oyster reefs, a geophysical survey of Copano Bay was conducted in June and July 2007. Surficial sediment analysis confirms that the recent sedimentation in Copano Bay is comprised of mostly estuarine mud with little sand or shell, large extents of oyster reefs and smaller areas of sand. Seismic stratigraphy analyses verify that the first oyster reefs in Copano Bay formed atop topographic highs in the Pleistocene surface. About 6 ka, sea level rise slowed to near its present rate and sediment supply decreased tremendously to Copano Bay decreasing the amount of suspended sediment. The first oyster reefs began forming around this time using these fluvial terraces as suitable substrate. Once the initial reefs were established, additional reefs began forming atop these initial reefs, or on the eroded shell hash material from the initial reefs. During this time of slow sea level rise and low sediment input to the bay, oyster reefs thrived and reef and shell hash material covered a majority of the bay surface. Once climate change increased sediment input to the bay, the reefs began to decrease in size due to siltation. The reefs have continued to decrease in size causing a 64 percent reduction in oyster reef and shell hash area from approximately 4.8 ka to today.
author2 Dellapenna, Timothy
author_facet Dellapenna, Timothy
Piper, Erin Alynn
author Piper, Erin Alynn
author_sort Piper, Erin Alynn
title Antecedent Geologic Controls on the Distribution of Oyster Reefs in Copano Bay, Texas
title_short Antecedent Geologic Controls on the Distribution of Oyster Reefs in Copano Bay, Texas
title_full Antecedent Geologic Controls on the Distribution of Oyster Reefs in Copano Bay, Texas
title_fullStr Antecedent Geologic Controls on the Distribution of Oyster Reefs in Copano Bay, Texas
title_full_unstemmed Antecedent Geologic Controls on the Distribution of Oyster Reefs in Copano Bay, Texas
title_sort antecedent geologic controls on the distribution of oyster reefs in copano bay, texas
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-05-7930
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