Big shells, bigger data: cohort analysis of Chesapeake Bay Crassostrea virginica reefs
Madison D. Griffin, Grace S. Chiu, Roger L. Mann, Melissa J. Southworth, John K. Thomas

TL;DR
This study develops a novel Gaussian mixture modeling approach to analyze oyster shell length data, revealing increased resilience and longer lifespans of oyster cohorts in Chesapeake Bay over two decades.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new GMM-based method to identify oyster cohorts and estimate their lifespan from shell length data, enhancing understanding of oyster resilience.
Findings
Oyster cohorts have longer lifespans in recent years.
Oysters grew larger in the mid-to-late 2010s.
Most reefs show signs of increased resilience.
Abstract
Oysters in Virginia Chesapeake Bay oyster reefs are "age-truncated", possibly due to a combination of historical overfishing, disease epizootics, environmental degradation, and climate change. Research has suggested that oysters exhibit resilience to environmental stressors; however, that evidence is based on the current limited understanding of oyster lifespan. Until this paper, the Virginia Oyster Stock Assessment and Replenishment Archive (VOSARA), a spatially and temporally expansive dataset (222 reefs across 2003-2023) of shell lengths (SL, mm), had yet to be examined comprehensively in the context of resilience. We develop a novel method using Gaussian mixture modeling (GMM) to identify the age groups in each reef using yearly SL data and then link those age groups over time to identify cohorts and estimate their lifespan. Sixty-four reefs (29%) are deemed to have sufficient data…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies · Marine and fisheries research · Aquatic Invertebrate Ecology and Behavior
