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Climate change, precipitation and impacts on an estuarine refuge from disease
Authors
A Bromley
A Craig
+51 more
Adam Starke
AF Starke
Bassem Allam
BW Albright
CB McCollough
CB Officer
CD Harvell
CF Dungan
David Ralston
DK Ralston
DK Ralston
DM Schulte
DR Franz
E Hofmann
E Hofmann
EM Burreson
EM Burreson
EW North
FC Coleman
FR Black
HH Haskin
HH Haskin
J Bain
JBC Jackson
Jeffrey Levinton
JG Mackin
JG Mackin
JN Kraeuter
John Murray Roberts
K Hayhoe
LD Coen
Michael Doall
MK La Peyre
MK La Peyre
R Mann
R Mann
RG Najjar
RG Najjar
RIE Newell
RIE Newell
RN Lipcius
S Ray
SE Ford
SE Ford
SE Shumway
SM Ray
SS Ristich
SW Nixon
T Cook
WM Kemp
WS Fisher
Publication date
1 April 2011
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
© The Author(s), 2011. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in PLoS One 6 (2011): e18849, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0018849.Oysters play important roles in estuarine ecosystems but have suffered recently due to overfishing, pollution, and habitat loss. A tradeoff between growth rate and disease prevalence as a function of salinity makes the estuarine salinity transition of special concern for oyster survival and restoration. Estuarine salinity varies with discharge, so increases or decreases in precipitation with climate change may shift regions of low salinity and disease refuge away from optimal oyster bottom habitat, negatively impacting reproduction and survival. Temperature is an additional factor for oyster survival, and recent temperature increases have increased vulnerability to disease in higher salinity regions. We examined growth, reproduction, and survival of oysters in the New York Harbor-Hudson River region, focusing on a low-salinity refuge in the estuary. Observations were during two years when rainfall was above average and comparable to projected future increases in precipitation in the region and a past period of about 15 years with high precipitation. We found a clear tradeoff between oyster growth and vulnerability to disease. Oysters survived well when exposed to intermediate salinities during two summers (2008, 2010) with moderate discharge conditions. However, increased precipitation and discharge in 2009 reduced salinities in the region with suitable benthic habitat, greatly increasing oyster mortality. To evaluate the estuarine conditions over longer periods, we applied a numerical model of the Hudson to simulate salinities over the past century. Model results suggest that much of the region with suitable benthic habitat that historically had been a low salinity refuge region may be vulnerable to higher mortality under projected increases in precipitation and discharge. Predicted increases in precipitation in the northeastern United States due to climate change may lower salinities past important thresholds for oyster survival in estuarine regions with appropriate substrate, potentially disrupting metapopulation dynamics and impeding oyster restoration efforts, especially in the Hudson estuary where a large basin constitutes an excellent refuge from disease.Funding was provided by the Hudson River Foundation, grant number 00607A, and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (MOU 2008)
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