Expansion of shellfish aquaculture has no impact on settlement rates

Author:

Toone TA12,Benjamin ED12,Handley S2,Jeffs A1,Hillman JR1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Marine Science, University of Auckland, Leigh 0985, New Zealand

2. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Nelson 7010, New Zealand

Abstract

Wild shellfish reefs have been decimated in many parts of the world over the last century, diminishing their vital ecological roles as habitat generators and the ecosystem services they provide, such as water filtration. Over this same timescale, shellfish aquaculture has rapidly expanded to become an impressive global industry with an annual worldwide production worth US$35.4 billion in 2020. Both wild reefs and aquaculture operations typically rely on abundant shellfish settlement levels to maintain their respective populations. At the same time, shellfish aquaculture has the potential to influence settlement, as the addition of cultured shellfish to an ecosystem increases the quantity of reproductive adults and may therefore increase settlement rates. Alternatively, shellfish aquaculture may lead to an overall reduction in settlement in an ecosystem, either directly through cannibalistic consumption of larvae or indirectly by straining carrying capacity. We assessed the role of marine shellfish aquaculture on settlement by comparing changes in the abundance of settling green-lipped mussels Perna canaliculus with the expansion of mussel farms at the north end of New Zealand’s South Island over a 47 yr timespan. Overall, mussel settlement did not increase over this period despite an estimated 16000-fold increase in the number of mussels living in the region as mussel aquaculture proliferated. The disconnect between the extent of mussel settlement and mussel aquaculture was consistent across 3 separate areas within the region, suggesting that aquaculture mussels may be unable to produce larvae capable of settlement and emphasizing the importance of wild mussel populations for ecosystem resilience.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science

Reference68 articles.

1. Considering the use of subadult and juvenile mussels for mussel reef restoration

2. Evidence of cannibalism and bentho-pelagic coupling within the life cycle of the mussel, Perna canaliculus

3. Alfaro AC, Jeffs A (2002) Small-scale mussel settlement patterns within morphologically distinct substrata at Ninety Mile Beach, northern New Zealand. Malacologia 44:1-15

4. Alfaro AC, Jeffs AG, Hooker SH (2001) Reproductive behavior of the green-lipped mussel, Perna canaliculus, in northern New Zealand. Bull Mar Sci 69:1095-1108

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