Mussel production as a nutrient mitigation tool for improving marine water quality

Longline mussel farming has been proposed as a tool to remove nutrients and counteract the negative effects of eutrophication in coastal waters. In this study, we use coupled 3D hydrodynamic and ecological modelling in combination with measurements from a full-scale mitigation farm to assess the env...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aquaculture Environment Interactions 2019-01, Vol.11, p.191-204
Hauptverfasser: Timmermann, Karen, Maar, Marie, Bolding, Karsten, Larsen, Janus, Windolf, Jørgen, Nielsen, Pernille, Petersen, Jens Kjerulf
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Longline mussel farming has been proposed as a tool to remove nutrients and counteract the negative effects of eutrophication in coastal waters. In this study, we use coupled 3D hydrodynamic and ecological modelling in combination with measurements from a full-scale mitigation farm to assess the environmental effects of mitigation cultures in Skive Fjord, Denmark, a shallow eutrophic estuary. The results show that mitigation cultures decrease chl a concentration and increase Secchi depth especially in the surroundings of the farms but also on a basin scale. Fecal production by the mussels increases sedimentation below the farms but reduces ambient sedimentation, resulting in a net decrease in sedimentation of organic material on a basin scale. Comparisons with nutrient load reduction scenarios indicate that nutrient removal by mitigation cultures have a higher short-term impact on water quality parameters (chl a, Secchi depth and sedimentation) than nutrient removal using land-based measures.
ISSN:1869-215X
1869-7534
DOI:10.3354/aei00306