학술논문

Intertidal rack-and-bag oyster farms have limited interaction with horseshoe crab activity in New Jersey, USA
Document Type
article
Source
Aquaculture Environment Interactions, Vol 9, Pp 205-211 (2017)
Subject
Aquaculture. Fisheries. Angling
SH1-691
Ecology
QH540-549.5
Language
English
ISSN
1869-215X
1869-7534
Abstract
Concern has been raised about the ability of horseshoe crabs Limulus polyphemus to traverse intertidal rack-and-bag oyster farms, and how farms may change shorebird foraging activity. During the 2016 horseshoe crab spawning season, experiments conducted in Delaware Bay (New Jersey, USA) assessed the ability of crabs to move among oyster farms and access landward nesting grounds, and surveyed the distribution of dislodged eggs upon which many shorebirds feed. Experiments included testing (1) for impairment of crab passage by oyster racks, (2) for differences in crab abundance among paired farm/control transects, (3) whether farms affect crab stranding rates on nesting beaches, and (4) assessing the spatial distribution of dislodged eggs along the wrack zone among farm and non-farm areas. All crabs, regardless of size, passed beneath racks ≥10 cm tall, indicating that the regulated rack height of 30.5 cm is abundantly precautious to allow crab movement beneath racks. Farm/control census observed 853 crabs in total, with no evidence of differing crab numbers among farmed and control transects. Only 2 of 853 (