2020
DOI: 10.1002/mcf2.10117
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Trends in Oyster Populations in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico: An Assessment of River Discharge and Fishing Effects over Time and Space

Abstract: Within the Big Bend region of the northeastern Gulf of Mexico, one of the least developed coastlines in the continental USA, intertidal and subtidal populations of eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica (hereafter referred to as "oyster") are a critical ecosystem and important economic constituent. We assessed trends in intertidal oyster populations, river discharge, and commercial fishing activity in the Suwannee River estuary within the Big Bend region using fisheries-independent data from irregular monitoring… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(28 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
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“…Oyster reefs in this region commonly form linear chains parallel to the shoreline and provide multiple ecosystem services ranging from fisheries, protection of shoreline features, and promotion of estuarine conditions ( Kaplan et al, 2016 ). In recent decades, Lone Cabbage Reef has degraded in terms of oyster coverage and elevation of the reef surface ( Frederick et al, 2016 ; Moore et al, 2020 ; Seavey et al, 2011 ), potentially reducing the effectiveness of this reef complex in providing both local (e.g., oyster habitat for fish and wildlife) and large-scale (e.g., promotion of estuarine conditions; Kaplan et al, 2016 ) ecosystem benefits and fishery harvests. Since multiple lines of evidence have identified substrate as a limiting resource ( Frederick et al, 2016 ), our restoration approach uses large, quarried limestone rock (average size 52 × 34 × 33 cm) to rebuild the elevation and historic footprint of Lone Cabbage reef identified from surveys completed in the 1800’s ( Raabe, Streck & Stumpf, 2004 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Oyster reefs in this region commonly form linear chains parallel to the shoreline and provide multiple ecosystem services ranging from fisheries, protection of shoreline features, and promotion of estuarine conditions ( Kaplan et al, 2016 ). In recent decades, Lone Cabbage Reef has degraded in terms of oyster coverage and elevation of the reef surface ( Frederick et al, 2016 ; Moore et al, 2020 ; Seavey et al, 2011 ), potentially reducing the effectiveness of this reef complex in providing both local (e.g., oyster habitat for fish and wildlife) and large-scale (e.g., promotion of estuarine conditions; Kaplan et al, 2016 ) ecosystem benefits and fishery harvests. Since multiple lines of evidence have identified substrate as a limiting resource ( Frederick et al, 2016 ), our restoration approach uses large, quarried limestone rock (average size 52 × 34 × 33 cm) to rebuild the elevation and historic footprint of Lone Cabbage reef identified from surveys completed in the 1800’s ( Raabe, Streck & Stumpf, 2004 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since multiple lines of evidence have identified substrate as a limiting resource ( Frederick et al, 2016 ), our restoration approach uses large, quarried limestone rock (average size 52 × 34 × 33 cm) to rebuild the elevation and historic footprint of Lone Cabbage reef identified from surveys completed in the 1800’s ( Raabe, Streck & Stumpf, 2004 ). Oyster monitoring efforts focus on assessing restoration goals of increases in Lone Cabbage oyster population (counts from transects) on restored oyster bars compared to adjacent extant unrestored (wild) oyster bars, which may be declining ( Moore et al, 2020 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Several factors affect inter-and sub-tidal oyster populations. A series of natural disasters and especially hurricanes (e.g., Katrina in 2005) as well as flooding events (and especially in 2019) have negatively affected local populations (Moore et al, 2020). Oysters are filter feeding invertebrates, and as such have limited capacity to metabolize organic pollutants such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) resulting in their bioaccumulation within tissues.…”
Section: Species-level Summariesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Landings in Alabama and especially Mississippi were among the time series lows in 2018, with the latter likely affected by freshwater flooding of Mississippi Sound from heavy rains and the opening of the Bonnet Carré Spillway. For Florida, most landings occurred east of the area affected by the DWH spill, and long-term declines there are likely related to hydrological changes (Moore et al, 2020).…”
Section: Species-level Summariesmentioning
confidence: 99%