Oyster Predation by Black Drum Varies Spatially and Seasonally

Oyster reefs (Crassostrea virginica) supply important ecosystem services to estuarine habitats in the northern Gulf of Mexico, but little is known of the role of fish predators in controlling their structure or areal cover on soft sediments. At two sites and during fall and spring, we employed gill...

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Veröffentlicht in:Estuaries and coasts 2008-07, Vol.31 (3), p.597-604
Hauptverfasser: Brown, Kenneth M, George, Gerald J, Peterson, Gary W, Thompson, Bruce A, Cowan, James H., Jr
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container_end_page 604
container_issue 3
container_start_page 597
container_title Estuaries and coasts
container_volume 31
creator Brown, Kenneth M
George, Gerald J
Peterson, Gary W
Thompson, Bruce A
Cowan, James H., Jr
description Oyster reefs (Crassostrea virginica) supply important ecosystem services to estuarine habitats in the northern Gulf of Mexico, but little is known of the role of fish predators in controlling their structure or areal cover on soft sediments. At two sites and during fall and spring, we employed gill nets and trot lines to remove black drum (Pogonias cromis) from experimental reefs, and assessed oyster survival in comparison to control reefs. Numbers and biomass of black drum removed from reefs varied seasonally, among sites, and among removal methods. In the fall, black drum were rare at one site and abundant at the other, but did not significantly lower oyster survival on control reefs at either site. In the spring, black drum were common at both sites, and significantly lowered oyster survival on control reefs. Oysters and epizoic hooked mussels comprised roughly a third of the fishes’ diet, and oyster mortality was closely related to the percentage of drum feeding on oysters. There was little evidence of mortality from other predators of seed oysters like stone crabs or Southern oyster drills, and a repeated measures analysis of variance indicated black drum biomass was significantly depressed on experimental reefs during the experiments. Black drum thus appear to be potentially important predators on oyster reefs, but more work needs to be done on what factors explain the temporal and spatial variation in their abundance and oyster consumption.
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At two sites and during fall and spring, we employed gill nets and trot lines to remove black drum (Pogonias cromis) from experimental reefs, and assessed oyster survival in comparison to control reefs. Numbers and biomass of black drum removed from reefs varied seasonally, among sites, and among removal methods. In the fall, black drum were rare at one site and abundant at the other, but did not significantly lower oyster survival on control reefs at either site. In the spring, black drum were common at both sites, and significantly lowered oyster survival on control reefs. Oysters and epizoic hooked mussels comprised roughly a third of the fishes’ diet, and oyster mortality was closely related to the percentage of drum feeding on oysters. There was little evidence of mortality from other predators of seed oysters like stone crabs or Southern oyster drills, and a repeated measures analysis of variance indicated black drum biomass was significantly depressed on experimental reefs during the experiments. Black drum thus appear to be potentially important predators on oyster reefs, but more work needs to be done on what factors explain the temporal and spatial variation in their abundance and oyster consumption.</abstract><cop>New York</cop><pub>Springer-Verlag</pub><doi>10.1007/s12237-008-9045-8</doi><tpages>8</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects analysis of variance
Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Biological and medical sciences
Biomass
Brackish
Brackish water ecosystems
Coastal Sciences
crabs
Crassostrea virginica
Crustaceans
Decapoda
Diet
Drum
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecology
Ecosystem services
Environment
Environmental Management
Fish
Fish feeding
Fishing lines
Freshwater & Marine Ecology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Gill nets
gillnets
habitats
Invertebrates
Leases
Marine
Marine ecology
Mollusca
Mortality
mussels
Oysters
Pogonias cromis
Predation
Predators
Reefs
seasonal variation
sediments
Spring
Studies
Synecology
trotting
Variance analysis
Water and Health
title Oyster Predation by Black Drum Varies Spatially and Seasonally
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