Impact of introduced juvenile mussel cultures on the pelagic ecosystem of the western Wadden Sea, The Netherlands
Jacobs, P.; Riegman, R.; van der Meer, J. (2016). Impact of introduced juvenile mussel cultures on the pelagic ecosystem of the western Wadden Sea, The Netherlands. Aquaculture Environment Interactions 8: 553–566. https://dx.doi.org/10.3354/aei00196
In: Aquaculture Environment Interactions. Inter Research: Oldendorf. ISSN 1869-215X; e-ISSN 1869-7534, meer
Pelagic mussel collectors provide an alternative to fishing for mussel seed from naturalbeds. These collectors, which have been recently introduced in the Dutch part of the WaddenSea, facilitate the settlement and survival of blue mussel Mytilus edulis larvae. We assessed theremoval of plankton by juvenile mussels and the recovery of plankton after filtration. A mesocosmexperiment, using natural sea water, was executed on 12 occasions from June to October in 2010and 2011. Mussel filtration resulted in large reductions in nanophytoplankton, ciliate and totalchlorophyll biomasses (65−62%), while picophytoplankton and bacterial biomasses were reducedto a lower extent (38 and 18%). After filtration, mussels were removed and the plankton communitywas allowed to recover for 8 d, which is the average residence time of water in the area. Duringthis recovery period, net growth rates of bacteria, pico- and nanophytoplankton increased initiallyin the mussel-filtered mesocosms, but at the end of the recovery period, growth rates weresimilar in mussel-filtered and control mesocosms. At the end of the recovery period, plankton concentrationsbetween control and mussel mesocosms were not statistically different despite the initiallarge reduction due to mussel filtration. Our results suggest that nutrients released by musselsduring filtration might have stimulated the filtered plankton community, enabling recovery tofiltration within 8 d.
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