4.5 Article

Evaluating Connections Between Nitrogen Cycling and the Macrofauna in Native Oyster Beds in a New England Estuary

期刊

ESTUARIES AND COASTS
卷 45, 期 1, 页码 196-212

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-021-00954-x

关键词

Denitrification; Oyster beds; Nutrient fluxes; Macrofauna

资金

  1. RI Sea Grant award
  2. Dean's Fellowship
  3. Teaching Fellowship from the Boston University Biology Department
  4. Boston University Marine Program Warren McLeod Research Fellowship
  5. Summer Research Fellowship from the Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer Range Future at Boston University
  6. US Environmental Protection Agency

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Efforts to quantify biogeochemical and ecological processes in oyster habitats have shown that oysters may impact nitrogen cycling and ecosystem structure, but competition and refuge effects in habitats need further investigation.
Recent efforts to quantify biogeochemical and ecological processes in oyster habitats have focused on provision of habitat and regulation of the nitrogen cycle. However, it is unclear how these two processes may interact. In this study, seasonal patterns of habitat use and nitrogen removal from natural oyster beds were quantified for comparison with nearby bare sediment in Green Hill Pond, a temperate coastal lagoon in RI, USA. Relationships were tested between benthic macrofaunal abundance and nitrogen removal via denitrification and burial in sediments. Nitrogen removal by oyster bio-assimilation was quantified and compared with nearby oyster aquaculture. Despite limited differences in habitat use by macrofauna, there were fewer non-oyster benthic organisms (e.g., filter-feeders, detritivores) where oysters were present, possibly due to competition for resources. Additionally, low rugosity of the native oyster beds provided little refuge value for prey. There was a shift from net N removal via denitrification in bare sediments to nitrogen fixation beneath oysters, though this change was not statistically significant (t((96)) = 1.201; p = 0.233). Sediments contained low concentrations of N; however sediments beneath oysters contained almost twice as much N (0.07%) as bare sediments (0.04%; p < 0.001). There was no difference in tissue N content between wild oysters and those raised in aquaculture nearby, though caged oysters had more tissue per shell mass and length, and therefore removed more N on a shell length basis. These oyster beds lacked the complex structure of three-dimensional oyster reefs which may have diminished their ability to provide habitat for refugia, foraging sites for macrofauna, and conditions known to stimulate denitrification.

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