Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Extent of influence of salmon farms on benthic community and trophic structure - Myriam Callier
1. Extent of influence of salmon farms on benthic
community and trophic structure
Myriam Callier
School of Biology and Environmental Science,
University College Dublin
now at IFREMER, Palavas Station, France
S. Lefebvre, K. Dunagan, M-P Bataille, J. Coughlan and T. Crowe
2. Aquaculture waste into the food web
Food
dissolved
Excretion Secondary
N 60%, P 10% consumer
C 1%
Primary Primary
Organic
producers Faeces Lost consumers
matter
N 15%, P 60%, C 25%
Various pathways
Assimilation of aquaculture waste by the biota (Sara et al. 2004, Lojen et al.
2005, Dolenec et al. 2007)
3. Objectives
• Determine the influence of aquaculture waste
on benthic communities
2. Assess the contribution of aquaculture waste
to benthic organisms’ diet
4. • Influence of aquaculture waste on benthic
communities
Hypotheses:
3. Abundance and diversity of benthic macrofauna will vary
along transects leading away from salmon cages
2. Benthic community structure will differ between sites located
at different distances from the farm
3. Extent of fish farm influence depends on residual water
current direction
5. Study sites
Mulroy Bay, Co. Donegal, Republic of Ireland
Mulroy Bay
Millstone
T2
T1
Main current direction
Cranford
T1
2 km
N T2
7. 0m
25m
20
200m b b b
1- Results
Number of species
16
b
12 b
b
a a
8
a a a a
4
0
Abundance per core sample M-T1 M-T2 C-T1 C-T2
300 b
225 a
150 a
a
a a
a a
75 a
a a a
0
M-T1 M-T2 C-T1 C-T2
2.5
b b
2 b b b
Shannon H'
b
Diversity: lower under the cages and 25m,
1.5
in the current direction a
a
1 a a
a a
0.5
0
Callier et al., in
M-T1 M-T2 C-T1 C-T2 revision
8. 0m
25m
20
200m b b b
1- Results
Number of species
16
b
12 b
b
a a
8
a a a a
4
0
Abundance per core sample M-T1 M-T2 C-T1 C-T2
300 b
225 a
150 a
a
a a
a a
75 a
a a a
0
M-T1 M-T2 C-T1 C-T2
2.5
b b
2 b b b
Shannon H'
b
1.5
a
a
1 a
Abundance: no significant difference, a
except Cranford, under cages a
0.5
a
0 Callier et al., in
Increase based on opportunisticC-T1
M-T1 M-T2 species C-T2 revision
9. 1- Community structure
Maldanidae
Stress: 0.13
0m 200 m
Malacoceros sp.
Capitella sp. Obusa
M-T1-25m
C-T2-25m
M-T2-25m
Lucinidae
C-T1-25m
Organic enrichment gradient
Callier et al., in
revision
10. 1- Summary
Localised organic enrichment due to salmon farming
Effects extend < 25 m, perpendicular to current
Effects extend 25-200m downstream
Under cages: low diversity, high abundance of
opportunistic species
Are these species benefiting from the organic input ?
11. 2. Assess the contribution of aquaculture waste
in the benthic organism’s diet
Stable isotope (SI) increasingly used to determine:
• Trophic level, pathways of OM in food webs
• Contribution of food sources to organisms’ diet
Carbon (δ13C) and Nitrogen (δ15N) efficient tracer of salmon
food:
Compared to other sources:
• Enriched in 15N as contain fish/crustacen meal (Mazzola and Sara 2001)
• Depleted in 13C as contain terrestrial vegetables (wheat, soya)
(Yokoyama and Ishihi, 2007)
20. 2- Summary
• 13C and 15N are effective tracers
• Benthic organisms feed on fish farm waste
• Fouling organisms assimilate particulate material
released from fish cages
21. Conclusions
Increased biomass of suspension feeders (eg. Tunicates)
could decrease levels of particulate and dissolved material in
the surrounding environment
Potential mitigation strategy?
Substrates could be used in highly sensitive environments,
where small reductions in nutrient loading could be critical
22. Perspective
Could the biomass of fouling organisms be
increased to increase uptake of organic
material?
Could benthic species (polychaetes) be
used in integrated aquaculture systems to
valorise fish farm waste
23. Acknowledgement
HELP AND ADVICE
• Francis O’Beirn, Marine Institute
• Grainne O’Brein, BIM BIM
• Catherine McManus, Marine Harvest Ireland
FIELD and LAB WORK
• MarBEE team!
• Special thanks to Julien, Paul and Silvia
• Divers and staff from Marine Harvest, Mulroy Bay!
FUNDING AGENCY
• Environmental Protection Agency, NDP, SSTI
As well as the benthic samples, articifial substrata were also deployed to investigate development of fouling communities and their uptake of organic matter from the farm.
Deposit collected in sediment traps beneath the cages.
Black symbols: under cages; Grey: 25 m; white: 200m. The study showed that Ascidiella aspersa, a filter feeder, presented enriched δ15N at sites under the farms. This result indicates that tunicates efficiently filter and assimilate particulate fish waste.