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Habitat value of Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs on soft sediments

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Habitat value of Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs on soft sediments. / McLeod, Ian M.; Bostrom Einarsson, Lisa; Creighton, C. et al.
In: Marine and Freshwater Research, 28.10.2019.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

McLeod, IM, Bostrom Einarsson, L, Creighton, C, D'Anastasi, B, Diggles, B, Dwyer, PG, Firby, L, Le Port, A, Luongo, A, Martinez-Baena, F, McOrrie, S, Heller-Wagner, G & Gillies, CL 2019, 'Habitat value of Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs on soft sediments', Marine and Freshwater Research. https://doi.org/10.1071/mf18197

APA

McLeod, I. M., Bostrom Einarsson, L., Creighton, C., D'Anastasi, B., Diggles, B., Dwyer, P. G., Firby, L., Le Port, A., Luongo, A., Martinez-Baena, F., McOrrie, S., Heller-Wagner, G., & Gillies, C. L. (2019). Habitat value of Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs on soft sediments. Marine and Freshwater Research. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1071/mf18197

Vancouver

McLeod IM, Bostrom Einarsson L, Creighton C, D'Anastasi B, Diggles B, Dwyer PG et al. Habitat value of Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs on soft sediments. Marine and Freshwater Research. 2019 Oct 28. Epub 2019 Oct 28. doi: 10.1071/mf18197

Author

McLeod, Ian M. ; Bostrom Einarsson, Lisa ; Creighton, C. et al. / Habitat value of Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs on soft sediments. In: Marine and Freshwater Research. 2019.

Bibtex

@article{c87eaf0f559f4f37a95c078a3ffe4215,
title = "Habitat value of Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs on soft sediments",
abstract = "Estimates of the ecological and economic value of ecosystems can provide important information for the prioritisation of conservation and restoration actions. Oyster reefs that were once common in temperate coastal waters have now been largely degraded or lost. Oyster reefs provide a suite of ecological services, including habitat and a food supply for a range of other species. In Australia, there is growing interest in oyster reef restoration, but there are knowledge gaps with regard to their structure and habitat value. Here, we describe the structure of eight remnant Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs and estimate the density, biomass, productivity and composition of mobile macroinvertebrate and infaunal communities associated with them. The oyster reefs had a distinct assemblage of macroinvertebrates, with fivefold higher density of larger (≥2 mm) macroinvertebrates, fivefold higher biomass and almost fivefold higher productivity, than that of adjacent bare sediments. The productivity of infaunal communities was twice as high under oyster reefs than in adjacent bare sediments. Therefore, S. glomerata reef restoration is likely to provide important habitat for macroinvertebrate communities and boost local secondary production.",
author = "McLeod, {Ian M.} and {Bostrom Einarsson}, Lisa and C. Creighton and B. D'Anastasi and B. Diggles and Dwyer, {P. G.} and L. Firby and {Le Port}, A. and A. Luongo and F. Martinez-Baena and S. McOrrie and G. Heller-Wagner and Gillies, {C. L.}",
year = "2019",
month = oct,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1071/mf18197",
language = "English",
journal = "Marine and Freshwater Research",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Habitat value of Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs on soft sediments

AU - McLeod, Ian M.

AU - Bostrom Einarsson, Lisa

AU - Creighton, C.

AU - D'Anastasi, B.

AU - Diggles, B.

AU - Dwyer, P. G.

AU - Firby, L.

AU - Le Port, A.

AU - Luongo, A.

AU - Martinez-Baena, F.

AU - McOrrie, S.

AU - Heller-Wagner, G.

AU - Gillies, C. L.

PY - 2019/10/28

Y1 - 2019/10/28

N2 - Estimates of the ecological and economic value of ecosystems can provide important information for the prioritisation of conservation and restoration actions. Oyster reefs that were once common in temperate coastal waters have now been largely degraded or lost. Oyster reefs provide a suite of ecological services, including habitat and a food supply for a range of other species. In Australia, there is growing interest in oyster reef restoration, but there are knowledge gaps with regard to their structure and habitat value. Here, we describe the structure of eight remnant Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs and estimate the density, biomass, productivity and composition of mobile macroinvertebrate and infaunal communities associated with them. The oyster reefs had a distinct assemblage of macroinvertebrates, with fivefold higher density of larger (≥2 mm) macroinvertebrates, fivefold higher biomass and almost fivefold higher productivity, than that of adjacent bare sediments. The productivity of infaunal communities was twice as high under oyster reefs than in adjacent bare sediments. Therefore, S. glomerata reef restoration is likely to provide important habitat for macroinvertebrate communities and boost local secondary production.

AB - Estimates of the ecological and economic value of ecosystems can provide important information for the prioritisation of conservation and restoration actions. Oyster reefs that were once common in temperate coastal waters have now been largely degraded or lost. Oyster reefs provide a suite of ecological services, including habitat and a food supply for a range of other species. In Australia, there is growing interest in oyster reef restoration, but there are knowledge gaps with regard to their structure and habitat value. Here, we describe the structure of eight remnant Sydney rock oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) reefs and estimate the density, biomass, productivity and composition of mobile macroinvertebrate and infaunal communities associated with them. The oyster reefs had a distinct assemblage of macroinvertebrates, with fivefold higher density of larger (≥2 mm) macroinvertebrates, fivefold higher biomass and almost fivefold higher productivity, than that of adjacent bare sediments. The productivity of infaunal communities was twice as high under oyster reefs than in adjacent bare sediments. Therefore, S. glomerata reef restoration is likely to provide important habitat for macroinvertebrate communities and boost local secondary production.

U2 - 10.1071/mf18197

DO - 10.1071/mf18197

M3 - Journal article

JO - Marine and Freshwater Research

JF - Marine and Freshwater Research

ER -