Recruitment of a threatened foundation oyster species varies with large and small spatial scales

Author:

Leong Rick C.1ORCID,Bugnot Ana B.234ORCID,Ross Pauline M.23,Erickson Katherine R.12,Gibbs Mitchell C.2,Marzinelli Ezequiel M.235ORCID,O'Connor Wayne A.6,Parker Laura M.1,Poore Alistair G. B.1,Scanes Elliot27,Gribben Paul E.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Marine Science and Innovation University of New South Wales Sydney Kensington New South Wales Australia

2. School of Life and Environmental Sciences The University of Sydney Camperdown New South Wales Australia

3. Sydney Institute of Marine Science Mosman New South Wales Australia

4. CSIRO Environment Saint Lucia Queensland Australia

5. Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences Engineering Nanyang Technological University Singapore Singapore

6. New South Wales Department of Primary Industries Port Stephens Fisheries Institute Anna Bay New South Wales Australia

7. Climate Change Cluster University of Technology Sydney Ultimo New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding how habitat attributes (e.g., patch area and sizes, connectivity) control recruitment and how this is modified by processes operating at larger spatial scales is fundamental to understanding population sustainability and developing successful long‐term restoration strategies for marine foundation species—including for globally threatened reef‐forming oysters. In two experiments, we assessed the recruitment and energy reserves of oyster recruits onto remnant reefs of the oyster Saccostrea glomerata in estuaries spanning 550 km of coastline in southeastern Australia. In the first experiment, we determined whether recruitment of oysters to settlement plates in three estuaries was correlated with reef attributes within patches (distances to patch edges and surface elevation), whole‐patch attributes (shape and size of patches), and landscape attributes (connectivity). We also determined whether environmental factors (e.g., sedimentation and water temperature) explained the differences among recruitment plates. We also tested whether differences in energy reserves of recruits could explain the differences between two of the estuaries (one high‐ and one low‐sedimentation estuary). In the second experiment, across six estuaries (three with nominally high and three with nominally low sedimentation rates), we tested the hypothesis that, at the estuary scale, recruitment and survival were negatively correlated to sedimentation. Overall, total oyster recruitment varied mostly at the scale of estuaries rather than with reef attributes and was negatively correlated with sedimentation. Percentage recruit survival was, however, similar among estuaries, although energy reserves and condition of recruits were lower at a high‐ compared to a low‐sediment estuary. Within each estuary, total oyster recruitment increased with patch area and decreased with increasing tidal height. Our results showed that differences among estuaries have the largest influence on oyster recruitment and recruit health and this may be explained by environmental processes operating at the same scale. While survival was high across all estuaries, growth and reproduction of oysters on remnant reefs may be affected by sublethal effects on the health of recruits in high‐sediment estuaries. Thus, restoration programs should consider lethal and sublethal effects of whole‐estuary environmental processes when selecting sites and include environmental mitigation actions to maximize recruitment success.

Funder

University of New South Wales

Australian Research Council

Nature Conservancy

Publisher

Wiley

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