TY - JOUR
T1 - Impacts of otter trawling on colonial epifaunal assemblages on a cobble bottom ecosystem on Western Bank (northwest Atlantic).
AU - Henry, LeaAnne
AU - Kenchington, Ellen
AU - Kenchington, Trevor
AU - MacIsaac, Kevin
AU - Bourbonnais-Boyce, Cynthia
AU - Gordon, Donald
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - Colonial epifauna are an important component of benthic communities, providing
structural complexity at scales of millimetres to metres. Many are sessile, emergent and fragile?
characteristics which render them vulnerable to disturbances associated with bottom fishing. Many
also have impressive abilities to rapidly regenerate both sexually and asexually and, consequently,
the ultimate results of impacts of physical disturbance are difficult to predict. We analysed the effects
of 3 yr of pulsed experimental otter trawling, following an asymmetrical before-after-control-impact
design, on grab-sampled colonial epifauna. Our study site was on a cobble seabed on the Scotian
Shelf in a formerly important fishing ground which had seen no disturbance by mobile fishing gears
for 10 yr. The number of taxa, total biomass, the biomass of component major taxa (hydroids, bryozoans,
sponges, tunicates, soft corals) and the community composition were analysed for single-year
and cumulative effects. The study site had a rich colonial fauna containing at least 53 taxa, the majority
of which were hydroids. The small vase sponge Scypha ciliata, the leafy bryozoans Dendrobeania
spp. and the hydroids Symplectoscyphus spp. were the most frequent, occurring in >70% of the
samples. Significant inter-annual differences at control sites were observed. The number of taxa,
total biomass and hydroid biomass increased over the study period, with associated changes in
community composition. Short-term effects of trawling were detected as decreases in the number of
taxa per sample, total biomass and total hydroid biomass across the trawling events, although these
trends were non-significant after Bonferroni adjustment. No cumulative effects from the pulsed
trawling were detected, and colonial species assemblages on control and impacted lines were similar
at the end of the experiment. While some of the tests for trawling effects were statistically weak, it is
certain that any effects were small relative to natural inter-annual change.
AB - Colonial epifauna are an important component of benthic communities, providing
structural complexity at scales of millimetres to metres. Many are sessile, emergent and fragile?
characteristics which render them vulnerable to disturbances associated with bottom fishing. Many
also have impressive abilities to rapidly regenerate both sexually and asexually and, consequently,
the ultimate results of impacts of physical disturbance are difficult to predict. We analysed the effects
of 3 yr of pulsed experimental otter trawling, following an asymmetrical before-after-control-impact
design, on grab-sampled colonial epifauna. Our study site was on a cobble seabed on the Scotian
Shelf in a formerly important fishing ground which had seen no disturbance by mobile fishing gears
for 10 yr. The number of taxa, total biomass, the biomass of component major taxa (hydroids, bryozoans,
sponges, tunicates, soft corals) and the community composition were analysed for single-year
and cumulative effects. The study site had a rich colonial fauna containing at least 53 taxa, the majority
of which were hydroids. The small vase sponge Scypha ciliata, the leafy bryozoans Dendrobeania
spp. and the hydroids Symplectoscyphus spp. were the most frequent, occurring in >70% of the
samples. Significant inter-annual differences at control sites were observed. The number of taxa,
total biomass and hydroid biomass increased over the study period, with associated changes in
community composition. Short-term effects of trawling were detected as decreases in the number of
taxa per sample, total biomass and total hydroid biomass across the trawling events, although these
trends were non-significant after Bonferroni adjustment. No cumulative effects from the pulsed
trawling were detected, and colonial species assemblages on control and impacted lines were similar
at the end of the experiment. While some of the tests for trawling effects were statistically weak, it is
certain that any effects were small relative to natural inter-annual change.
KW - Otter trawling
KW - Colonial epifauna
KW - Cobble seabed
KW - Experiment
M3 - Article
SN - 1616-1599
SP - 63
EP - 78
JO - MAR ECOL-PROG SER
JF - MAR ECOL-PROG SER
IS - 6
ER -