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Long-term coexistence of non-indigenous species in aquaculture facilities

Long-term coexistence of non-indigenous species in aquaculture facilities
Long-term coexistence of non-indigenous species in aquaculture facilities
Non-indigenous species (NIS) are a growing problem globally and, in the sea, aquaculture activities are critical vectors for their introduction. Aquaculture introduces NIS, intentionally or unintentionally, and can provide substratum for the establishment of other NIS. Little is known about the co-occurrence of NIS over long periods and we document the coexistence over decades of a farmed NIS (a mussel) with an accidently introduced species (an ascidian). Both are widespread and cause serious fouling problems worldwide. We found partial habitat segregation across depth and the position of rafts within the studied farm, which suggests competitive exclusion of the mussel in dark, sheltered areas and physiological exclusion of the ascidian elsewhere. Both species exhibit massive self-recruitment, with negative effects on the industry, but critically the introduction of NIS through aquaculture facilities also has strong detrimental effects on the natural environment.
fouling, invasive species, facilitation, ciona intestinalis, mytilus galloprovincialis, south africa
0025-326X
2395-2403
Rius, Marc
c4e88345-4b4e-4428-b4b2-37229155f68d
Heasman, Kevin G.
d566b536-5ff5-458a-81a6-fa471437dea9
McQuaid, Christopher D.
97f8c217-f30c-405c-8cf3-f616208b5008
Rius, Marc
c4e88345-4b4e-4428-b4b2-37229155f68d
Heasman, Kevin G.
d566b536-5ff5-458a-81a6-fa471437dea9
McQuaid, Christopher D.
97f8c217-f30c-405c-8cf3-f616208b5008

Rius, Marc, Heasman, Kevin G. and McQuaid, Christopher D. (2011) Long-term coexistence of non-indigenous species in aquaculture facilities. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 62 (11), 2395-2403. (doi:10.1016/j.marpolbul.2011.08.030).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Non-indigenous species (NIS) are a growing problem globally and, in the sea, aquaculture activities are critical vectors for their introduction. Aquaculture introduces NIS, intentionally or unintentionally, and can provide substratum for the establishment of other NIS. Little is known about the co-occurrence of NIS over long periods and we document the coexistence over decades of a farmed NIS (a mussel) with an accidently introduced species (an ascidian). Both are widespread and cause serious fouling problems worldwide. We found partial habitat segregation across depth and the position of rafts within the studied farm, which suggests competitive exclusion of the mussel in dark, sheltered areas and physiological exclusion of the ascidian elsewhere. Both species exhibit massive self-recruitment, with negative effects on the industry, but critically the introduction of NIS through aquaculture facilities also has strong detrimental effects on the natural environment.

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More information

Published date: November 2011
Keywords: fouling, invasive species, facilitation, ciona intestinalis, mytilus galloprovincialis, south africa
Organisations: Ocean Biochemistry & Ecosystems

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 354672
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/354672
ISSN: 0025-326X
PURE UUID: f98bf138-ad68-4f02-a6d8-2d91760b3741

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Date deposited: 17 Jul 2013 10:51
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 14:22

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Contributors

Author: Marc Rius
Author: Kevin G. Heasman
Author: Christopher D. McQuaid

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