Restoration of the native eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) has been severely hindered by the dwindling supply and rising costs of fossil and new oyster shell (OS) for use in reef restoration. Consequently, emphasis has shifted to the use of alternative oyster reef materials, which need to be tested for their effectiveness as settlement substrate. Furthermore, low recruitment of wild larvae has also impeded restoration, indicating a need to assess the potential of field setting of cultured larvae. We experimentally examined oyster settlement, growth and survival on unconsolidated OS, vertically embedded oyster shell (ES) in concrete, and concrete Oyster Castles (OC) in field and mesocosm experiments. In addition, we examined settlement success of cultured larvae in the mesocosm experiment. In the field experiment, juvenile recruitment was 3× higher on castles and unconsolidated shell than on embedded shell. Castles retained 4× the number of oysters and hosted 5× the biomass than embedded shell, and retained 1.5× the oysters and hosted 3× the biomass than unconsolidated shell. The proportion of live oyster recruits on castles was 1.5× that on both embedded and unconsolidated shell. In the mesocosm experiment (90-d postlarval deployment), the castles recruited, retained, and hosted an oyster biomass 4× higher than that of unconsolidated and embedded shell. This study confirms that artificial reef materials, such as OC, are suitable alternative substrates for oyster restoration, and remote setting of larvae can be effective under controlled environmental conditions. Future restoration efforts should consider use of alternative reef substrates and field setting of larvae, where recruitment is limited, to maximize oyster recruitment, while simultaneously minimizing the cost of reef restoration.
How to translate text using browser tools
1 August 2015
Settlement, Growth, and Survival of Eastern Oysters on Alternative Reef Substrates
Seth J. Theuerkauf,
Russell P. Burke,
Romuald N. Lipcius
ACCESS THE FULL ARTICLE
Journal of Shellfish Research
Vol. 34 • No. 2
August 2015
Vol. 34 • No. 2
August 2015
artificial reefs
Crassostrea virginica
Oyster Castles
oyster restoration
remote larval setting