Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

One of the paramount goals of oyster reef living shorelines is to achieve sustained and adaptive coastal protection, which requires meeting ecological (i.e., develop a self-sustaining oyster population) and engineering (i.e., provide coastal defense) targets. In a large-scale comparison along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States, the efficacy of various designs of oyster reef living shorelines at providing wave attenuation was evaluated accounting for the ecological limitations of oysters with regard to inundation duration. A critical threshold for intertidal oyster reef establishment is 50% inundation duration. Living shorelines that spent less than one-half of the time (<50%) inundated were not considered suitable habitat for oysters, however, were effective at wave attenuation (68% reduction in wave height). Reefs that experienced >50% inundation were considered suitable habitat for oysters, but wave attenuation was similar to controls (no reef; ~5% reduction in wave height). Many of the oyster reef living shoreline approaches therefore failed to optimize the ecological and engineering goals. In both inundation regimes, wave transmission decreased with an increasing freeboard (difference between reef crest elevation and water level), supporting its importance in the wave attenuation capacity of oyster reef living shorelines. However, given that the reef crest elevation (and thus freeboard) should be determined by the inundation duration requirements of oysters, research needs to be refocused on understanding the implications of other reef parameters (e.g., width) for optimizing wave attenuation. A broader understanding of the reef characteristics and seascape contexts that result in effective coastal defense by oyster reefs is needed to inform appropriate design and implementation of oyster-based living shorelines globally.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eap.2382DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

oyster reef
24
living shorelines
24
wave attenuation
20
reef living
20
inundation duration
16
reef
11
oyster
8
coastal defense
8
50% inundation
8
reef crest
8

Similar Publications

Oysters archive information about the environment in which they lived within their shells. Elemental metal to Ca ratios (Me/Ca) of their shells can vary due to drivers related to climate, environment, or an individual's biological processes. However, it is not clear how effective Me/Ca are for assessing population relatedness given the diversity of factors that may influence shell geochemistry.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Oyster reefs form a critical, biogenic coastal habitat and host diverse assemblages of fish and invertebrates. Previous studies show that variation in the settlement and distribution of oyster reef inhabitants depends on factors such as flow and members of the benthic community. In other reef systems, such as coral reefs, the proximity of neighboring reefs also affects these patterns, yet this phenomenon is less explored in oyster systems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ecological restoration has emerged as a prominent conservation and management strategy widely touted for its utility in evaluating ecological theories when designed experimentally. In comparison, restoration has been underutilized to investigate evolution-oriented questions, despite the importance of evolutionary processes in conservation and management settings. Here, we leverage an experimental restoration approach using the eastern oyster, , an economically valuable and ecologically important reef-building foundation species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Oysters are ecologically and commercially important species that require frequent monitoring to track population demographics (e.g., abundance, growth, mortality).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Climate change is causing rapid, unexpected changes to ecosystems through alteration to environmental regimes, modification of species interactions, and increased frequency and magnitude of disturbances. Yet, how the type of disturbance affects food webs remains ambiguous. Long-term studies capturing ecosystem responses to extreme events are necessary to understand climate effects on species interactions and ecosystem resilience but remain rare.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF