2023
DOI: 10.1002/aqc.3972
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Sea bed disturbance increases flat oyster recruitment for low to moderate stock densities

Abstract: 1. It has long been suggested by commercial fishing interests that the sea bed benefits from being trawled or disturbed. Evidence to support increased benthic food web productivity in areas disturbed by trawling has suggested that this is the case, and that some mobile consumers can benefit from this increased productivity.2. The same hypothesis has been put forward for shellfish recruitment, that disturbance of the sea bed, e.g. 'harrowing', increases the exposure of suitable settlement substrates for shellfi… Show more

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“…The lowest intertidal areas of Thirslet creek on the Blackwater estuary near Tollesbury, Essex was selected as having both these properties (between 51°44 0 9.97 00 N, 0°48 0 57.46 00 E and 51°44 0 9.61 00 N, 0°49 0 13.06 00 E; see west/north-west creek in Fig. 1 in Cameron et al, 2023). In addition the ground at this point was relatively hard underfoot due to the presence of shell and gravel on the site that made working conditions safer and more representative of local subtidal oyster habitats of mixed sediment (Allison et al, 2020).…”
Section: Site Selectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The lowest intertidal areas of Thirslet creek on the Blackwater estuary near Tollesbury, Essex was selected as having both these properties (between 51°44 0 9.97 00 N, 0°48 0 57.46 00 E and 51°44 0 9.61 00 N, 0°49 0 13.06 00 E; see west/north-west creek in Fig. 1 in Cameron et al, 2023). In addition the ground at this point was relatively hard underfoot due to the presence of shell and gravel on the site that made working conditions safer and more representative of local subtidal oyster habitats of mixed sediment (Allison et al, 2020).…”
Section: Site Selectionmentioning
confidence: 99%