Assessing the recovery of functional diversity after sustained sediment screening at an aggregate dredging site in the North Sea
Assessing the recovery of functional diversity after sustained sediment screening at an aggregate dredging site in the North Sea
The effects of dredging the seabed for aggregate on benthic functional diversity were assessed using a suite of suitable indices on a recovering macrofaunal assemblage. Recovery was assessed as the return of a dredged assemblage to a state found in neighbouring undisturbed (reference) sites. In situ sediment screening was permitted during dredging operations; a difference in the sedimentary profile of the seabed between dredged and undisturbed reference sites was also observed. At sites of relatively high and low dredging intensity the sediment appeared more homogenous than reference sites after the selective removal of the coarser component. Initial assessment of the macrofaunal assemblage using univariate analytical techniques suggested a recovery of functional diversity at the low dredging intensity site after two years (according to the Infaunal Trophic Index, Taxonomic Distinctness index and Rao's Quadratic Entropy coefficient). However, multivariate analyses of the same data and of all indices except Taxonomic Distinctness indicated that assemblages at both high and low dredging intensity sites remained statistically indistinguishable from each other yet markedly different to the assemblage present in the reference area during the four-year study. The study concluded that recovery of functional diversity to a level found in a neighbouring undredged habitat had not occurred at either dredged site five years after the cessation of dredging. It is thought that the damage by dredging to functional diversity and to the capacity of the macrofaunal assemblage to recover is immediate and not so dependent on dredging intensity. The cumulative and wider ranging effects of sediment screening cannot be ignored or dismissed as a contributing factor to the similarities observed. The wider significance of these findings on the regulation of dredging activities is discussed.
Environmental assessment, Functional diversity, Marine aggregate dredging, Recovery, Sediment screening
358-366
Barrio Froján, Christopher R.S.
4935e7ee-ac0f-41bd-b00b-2c5806561d74
Cooper, Keith M.
66a5ede5-1e05-4ccd-8a41-4196febf06f3
Bremner, Julie
7f0556a2-dc0d-4417-87a0-a1688e1964eb
Defew, Emma C.
ad9f7afc-13b2-4063-ab1e-f7656efa2079
Wan Hussin, Wan M.R.
a5fcd33f-60dd-478b-9d86-e32bf75709ff
Paterson, David M.
67cad7f7-84c3-4f6b-8309-f54a7fd5da88
1 May 2011
Barrio Froján, Christopher R.S.
4935e7ee-ac0f-41bd-b00b-2c5806561d74
Cooper, Keith M.
66a5ede5-1e05-4ccd-8a41-4196febf06f3
Bremner, Julie
7f0556a2-dc0d-4417-87a0-a1688e1964eb
Defew, Emma C.
ad9f7afc-13b2-4063-ab1e-f7656efa2079
Wan Hussin, Wan M.R.
a5fcd33f-60dd-478b-9d86-e32bf75709ff
Paterson, David M.
67cad7f7-84c3-4f6b-8309-f54a7fd5da88
Barrio Froján, Christopher R.S., Cooper, Keith M., Bremner, Julie, Defew, Emma C., Wan Hussin, Wan M.R. and Paterson, David M.
(2011)
Assessing the recovery of functional diversity after sustained sediment screening at an aggregate dredging site in the North Sea.
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 92 (3), .
(doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2011.01.006).
Abstract
The effects of dredging the seabed for aggregate on benthic functional diversity were assessed using a suite of suitable indices on a recovering macrofaunal assemblage. Recovery was assessed as the return of a dredged assemblage to a state found in neighbouring undisturbed (reference) sites. In situ sediment screening was permitted during dredging operations; a difference in the sedimentary profile of the seabed between dredged and undisturbed reference sites was also observed. At sites of relatively high and low dredging intensity the sediment appeared more homogenous than reference sites after the selective removal of the coarser component. Initial assessment of the macrofaunal assemblage using univariate analytical techniques suggested a recovery of functional diversity at the low dredging intensity site after two years (according to the Infaunal Trophic Index, Taxonomic Distinctness index and Rao's Quadratic Entropy coefficient). However, multivariate analyses of the same data and of all indices except Taxonomic Distinctness indicated that assemblages at both high and low dredging intensity sites remained statistically indistinguishable from each other yet markedly different to the assemblage present in the reference area during the four-year study. The study concluded that recovery of functional diversity to a level found in a neighbouring undredged habitat had not occurred at either dredged site five years after the cessation of dredging. It is thought that the damage by dredging to functional diversity and to the capacity of the macrofaunal assemblage to recover is immediate and not so dependent on dredging intensity. The cumulative and wider ranging effects of sediment screening cannot be ignored or dismissed as a contributing factor to the similarities observed. The wider significance of these findings on the regulation of dredging activities is discussed.
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Accepted/In Press date: 14 January 2011
Published date: 1 May 2011
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
This work was partly funded by the UK Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (ODPM) , the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra – project code AE0915), the Crown Estate and the Marine Environmental Protection Fund of the Aggregates Levy Sustainability Fund (ALSF) . Unicomarine Ltd processed macrobenthic samples and Claire Morris (Cefas) performed the particle size distribution analysis of sediments. The authors gratefully acknowledge the various sources of traits data including the Biological Traits Information Catalogue (BIOTIC), an initiative of the Marine Biological Association (MBA), and the University of Oslo, where the traits database used in this study was created.
Keywords:
Environmental assessment, Functional diversity, Marine aggregate dredging, Recovery, Sediment screening
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 479925
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479925
ISSN: 0272-7714
PURE UUID: 80eb9902-b213-4caf-970c-40d6b629c5ed
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Date deposited: 28 Jul 2023 16:53
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:11
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Contributors
Author:
Christopher R.S. Barrio Froján
Author:
Keith M. Cooper
Author:
Julie Bremner
Author:
Emma C. Defew
Author:
Wan M.R. Wan Hussin
Author:
David M. Paterson
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