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Making seawalls multifunctional: The positive effects of seeded bivalves and habitat structure on species diversity and filtration rates. | LitMetric

Making seawalls multifunctional: The positive effects of seeded bivalves and habitat structure on species diversity and filtration rates.

Mar Environ Res

Sydney Institute of Marine Science, Building 19 Chowder Bay Road, Mosman, New South Wales, 2088, Australia; Institute for Marine and Antarctic Science, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, 7000, Australia.

Published: March 2021


Article Synopsis

  • The marine environment is increasingly changed by artificial structures, but eco-engineering can help mitigate the impacts by enhancing biodiversity and other ecological functions.
  • Researchers studied the effects of varying habitat complexity and seeding native oysters on concrete tiles placed on seawalls to see how it influenced particle removal rates and colonization by different species.
  • After 12 months, more complex, seeded tiles showed greater abundance and diversity of suspension feeders, leading to higher particle removal rates, suggesting that adding complexity to artificial structures can improve both biodiversity and ecological functions in urbanized coastal areas.

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Article Abstract

The marine environment is being increasingly modified by the construction of artificial structures, the impacts of which may be mitigated through eco-engineering. To date, eco-engineering has predominantly aimed to increase biodiversity, but enhancing other ecological functions is arguably of equal importance for artificial structures. Here, we manipulated complexity through habitat structure (flat, and 2.5 cm, 5 cm deep vertical and 5 cm deep horizontal crevices) and seeding with the native oyster (Saccostrea glomerata, unseeded and seeded) on concrete tiles (0.25 m × 0.25 m) affixed to seawalls to investigate whether complexity (both orientation and depth of crevices) influences particle removal rates by suspension feeders and colonisation by different functional groups, and whether there are any ecological trade-offs between these functions. After 12 months, complex seeded tiles generally supported a greater abundance of suspension feeding taxa and had higher particle removal rates than flat tiles or unseeded tiles. The richness and diversity of taxa also increased with complexity. The effect of seeding was, however, generally weaker on tiles with complex habitat structure. However, the orientation of habitat complexity and the depth of the crevices did not influence particle removal rates or colonising taxa. Colonisation by non-native taxa was low compared to total taxa richness. We did not detect negative ecological trade-offs between increased particle removal rates and diversity and abundance of key functional groups. Our results suggest that the addition of complexity to marine artificial structures could potentially be used to enhance both biodiversity and particle removal rates. Consequently, complexity should be incorporated into future eco-engineering projects to provide a range of ecological functions in urbanised estuaries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2020.105243DOI Listing

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