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1 January 2004 A Biological and Physical Monitoring Program to Evaluate Long-term Impacts from Sand Dredging Operations in the United States Outer Continental Shelf
Rob Nairn, Jay A. Johnson, Dane Hardin, Jacqueline Michel
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Abstract

The Minerals Management Service (MMS) International Activities and Marine Minerals Division is charged with management of Federal Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) sand and gravel resources that would be used for beach nourishment to repair storm damage and protect against sea-level rise. To reduce environmental damage associated with long-term and large-scale use of these resources, a project was funded by MMS to design a comprehensive physical and biological monitoring program for sand-mining activities. An initial task of this project was performance of a literature review to determine where information gaps existed regarding the effects of sand mining and which physical processes and biological resources should be the focus of monitoring. Based upon the literature review and a conference with other investigators, the monitoring program was designed to include the following elements: benthic communities and their trophic relationships to fishes, marine mammals and wildlife (operational monitoring), sediment sampling and analysis, wave monitoring and modeling, bathymetric and substrate surveys, and shoreline monitoring and modeling. Protocols were developed for these elements to ensure consistency of methods among studies. The two primary physical impacts of concern are changes to the sea bed resulting in changes to the erosion and sedimentation processes along the shore and changes to the sea bed that would have a direct and significant impact on the biological environment. The most important biological impacts from dredging to be monitored in this program are changes in benthic secondary production and trophic transfer to fishes.

Rob Nairn, Jay A. Johnson, Dane Hardin, and Jacqueline Michel "A Biological and Physical Monitoring Program to Evaluate Long-term Impacts from Sand Dredging Operations in the United States Outer Continental Shelf," Journal of Coastal Research 20(1), 126-137, (1 January 2004). https://doi.org/10.2112/1551-5036(2004)20[126:ABAPMP]2.0.CO;2
Received: 6 June 2003; Accepted: 1 June 2003; Published: 1 January 2004
KEYWORDS
benthic secondary production
marine biological monitoring
marine mammal monitoring
marine physical monitoring
OCS
sand mining
sand resources
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