Long-term benthic responses to sustained disturbance by aggregate extraction in an area off the east coast of the United Kingdom
Long-term benthic responses to sustained disturbance by aggregate extraction in an area off the east coast of the United Kingdom
The temporal variability of benthic assemblages inhabiting offshore gravel deposits in the North Sea is poorly known, as purpose-collected long-term data sets have until recently been non-existent. It has therefore proved difficult to understand the stability and resilience of these benthic ecosystems after disturbance caused by the extraction of aggregates on an industrial scale. The present investigation examines an 8-year time series of data collected in and around an active commercial aggregate extraction site off the east coast of the United Kingdom. Both physical and biological data sets suggest a distinct yet localised effect after sustained gravel extraction, with impacted sediments generally appearing more physically homogeneous and faunistically impoverished than undisturbed sediments. Although inter-annual variability of selected assemblage metrics was reduced in disturbed sediments, differences in some assemblage metrics became significant between years. Despite such observations, significant impacts to the benthos in any given year were not sustained for long. However, the magnitude of impact in almost every year would be enough to merit remedial intervention based on an existing model of measuring acceptable levels of disturbance as a result of organic enrichment. Caution must be exercised in making any such recommendations, especially as there are presently no models specifically designed to assess the degree of acceptable disturbance from aggregate extraction. This study not only highlights the importance of and need for long-term data sets in order to better understand the difference between natural and human-induced variability in benthic assemblages, but also emphasises the need to develop more relevant monitoring tools to better manage the activities of the marine aggregate extraction industry. Crown
macrobenthos, marine aggregates, North Sea, temporal variability
204-212
Barrio Froján, Christopher R.S.
4935e7ee-ac0f-41bd-b00b-2c5806561d74
Boyd, Siân E.
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Cooper, Keith M.
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Eggleton, Jacqueline D.
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Ware, Suzanne
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20 August 2008
Barrio Froján, Christopher R.S.
4935e7ee-ac0f-41bd-b00b-2c5806561d74
Boyd, Siân E.
9fdb9662-7998-4379-81b8-11f21f6cdd10
Cooper, Keith M.
66a5ede5-1e05-4ccd-8a41-4196febf06f3
Eggleton, Jacqueline D.
94a22a92-2787-4283-9b99-8a42485f17cf
Ware, Suzanne
fc4a8989-1534-4a1c-814b-4f62fb4f27fe
Barrio Froján, Christopher R.S., Boyd, Siân E., Cooper, Keith M., Eggleton, Jacqueline D. and Ware, Suzanne
(2008)
Long-term benthic responses to sustained disturbance by aggregate extraction in an area off the east coast of the United Kingdom.
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 79 (2), .
(doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2008.03.023).
Abstract
The temporal variability of benthic assemblages inhabiting offshore gravel deposits in the North Sea is poorly known, as purpose-collected long-term data sets have until recently been non-existent. It has therefore proved difficult to understand the stability and resilience of these benthic ecosystems after disturbance caused by the extraction of aggregates on an industrial scale. The present investigation examines an 8-year time series of data collected in and around an active commercial aggregate extraction site off the east coast of the United Kingdom. Both physical and biological data sets suggest a distinct yet localised effect after sustained gravel extraction, with impacted sediments generally appearing more physically homogeneous and faunistically impoverished than undisturbed sediments. Although inter-annual variability of selected assemblage metrics was reduced in disturbed sediments, differences in some assemblage metrics became significant between years. Despite such observations, significant impacts to the benthos in any given year were not sustained for long. However, the magnitude of impact in almost every year would be enough to merit remedial intervention based on an existing model of measuring acceptable levels of disturbance as a result of organic enrichment. Caution must be exercised in making any such recommendations, especially as there are presently no models specifically designed to assess the degree of acceptable disturbance from aggregate extraction. This study not only highlights the importance of and need for long-term data sets in order to better understand the difference between natural and human-induced variability in benthic assemblages, but also emphasises the need to develop more relevant monitoring tools to better manage the activities of the marine aggregate extraction industry. Crown
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Published date: 20 August 2008
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Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Marine and Waterways Division of the UK Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and The Crown Estate (contracts AE0903 and AE0916). The authors are grateful to Bob Clarke and Jon Barry for advice on statistical analyses, The Crown Estate for providing EMS data, Claire Mason and her team for the particle size analysis of sediment samples, external contractors who helped with the identification of taxa and colleagues and crew who carried out the sampling on Cefas' research ship.
Keywords:
macrobenthos, marine aggregates, North Sea, temporal variability
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Local EPrints ID: 480894
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480894
ISSN: 0272-7714
PURE UUID: 79a166c6-fcaf-4b95-9782-8875efe5c5c9
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Date deposited: 10 Aug 2023 16:44
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:11
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Contributors
Author:
Christopher R.S. Barrio Froján
Author:
Siân E. Boyd
Author:
Keith M. Cooper
Author:
Jacqueline D. Eggleton
Author:
Suzanne Ware
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