Interactions between dense seasonal macroalgal mats and oysters on natural and constructed shellfish reefs
Carter S. Smith, Michelle C. Brodeur, Stephanie R. Valdez, F. Joel Fodrie, Y. Stacy Zhang

TL;DR
This study explores how oysters and seasonal macroalgae interact on coastal reefs, finding that oysters provide important habitat for algae growth.
Contribution
The study reveals that oyster reefs facilitate macroalgal growth primarily by providing hard substrate, not through fertilization.
Findings
Macroalgal cover was significantly higher on constructed oyster reefs compared to natural ones.
Algal cover was higher on dead oyster mimics than on live oysters.
Macroalgae had no significant effect on oyster abundance or growth in the experiments.
Abstract
Oysters are important coastal foundation species that provide valuable hard substrate for the recruitment of epibiotic organisms in environments otherwise dominated by soft sediment. Yet, their interactions with epibionts are relatively understudied. Despite the proliferation of macroalgal mats across the Southeastern United States in winter months, the relationship between oysters (Crassostrea virginica) and seasonal macroalgae is poorly understood. We conducted an observational field survey and two manipulative field experiments to document seasonal macroalgal dynamics on intertidal oyster reefs and to better understand the interaction between the oysters and algae. We found that algal mats in North Carolina were primarily composed of two genera, Ulva and Ectocarpus, which together reached extremely high cover (up to 100%) over large areas of reef. Macroalgae appeared in January and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine and coastal plant biology · Marine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies · Marine Biology and Environmental Chemistry
