| Literature DB >> 28791040 |
Richard K F Unsworth1,2, Beth Williams1, Benjamin L Jones2,3, Leanne C Cullen-Unsworth2,3.
Abstract
Seagrass meadows commonly reside in shallow sheltered embayments typical of the locations that provide an attractive option for mooring boats. Given the potential for boat moorings to result in disturbance to the seabed due to repeated physical impact, these moorings may present a significant threat to seagrass meadows. The seagrass Zostera marina (known as eelgrass) is extensive across the northern hemisphere, forming critical fisheries habitat and creating efficient long-term stores of carbon in sediments. Although boat moorings have been documented to impact seagrasses, studies to date have been conducted on the slow growing Posidonia species' rather than the fast growing and rapidly reproducing Z. marina that may have a higher capacity to resist and recover from repeated disturbance. In the present study we examine swinging chain boat moorings in seagrass meadows across a range of sites in the United Kingdom to determine whether such moorings have a negative impact on the seagrass Zostera marina at the local and meadow scale. We provide conclusive evidence from multiple sites that Z. marina is damaged by swinging chain moorings leading to a loss of at least 6 ha of United Kingdom seagrass. Each swinging chain mooring was found to result in the loss of 122 m2 of seagrass. Loss is restricted to the area surrounding the mooring and the impact does not appear to translate to a meadow scale. This loss of United Kingdom seagrass from boat moorings is small but significant at a local scale. This is because it fragments existing meadows and ultimately reduces their resilience to other stressors. Boat moorings are prevalent in seagrass globally and it is likely this impairs their ecosystem functioning. Given the extensive ecosystem service value of seagrasses in terms of factors such as carbon storage and fish habitat such loss is of cause for concern. This indicates the need for the widespread use of seagrass friendly mooring systems in and around seagrass.Entities:
Keywords: boating; conservation biology; disturbance ecology; eelgrass beds; seagrass ecology
Year: 2017 PMID: 28791040 PMCID: PMC5526064 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.01309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
The mean scarred area (m2) of the moorings sampled, calculated for each site, this area was defined as the area between the center of the mooring and where the seagrass reached ≥ 10%.
| Site | Number of scars assessed | Mean scarred area (m2) (±SD) |
|---|---|---|
| Durgan | 6 | 167.55 (±229.4) |
| St. Marys, Scilly | 6 | 147.13 (±73.61) |
| St. Anthony, St. Mawes | 2 | 39.27 (±37.76) |
| Studland Bay | 4 | 75.4 (±55.49) |
| Fowey | 5 | 106.81 (±39.55) |
| All | 121.84 (±125.57) |
ANOVA model testing % seagrass cover as a function of distance away from the moored area.
| Difference | Lower | Upper | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 – Control | 14 | 0.13 | 27.87 | 0.05 |
| 50 – Control | 22 | 8.13 | 35.85 | <0.001 |
| 100 – Control | -9.33 | -23.20 | 4.53 | 0.33 |
| 150 – Control | 22 | 8.14 | 35.86 | <0.001 |
| 50 – 0 | 8 | -5.56 | 21.86 | 0.50 |
| 100 – 0 | -23.33 | -37.20 | -9.47 | <0.001 |
| 150 – 0 | 8 | -5.86 | 21.86 | 0.50 |
| 100 – 50 | -31.33 | -45.19 | -17.47 | <0.001 |
| 150 – 50 | 0 | -13.86 | 13.86 | 1 |
| 150 – 100 | 31.33 | 17.47 | 45.20 | <0.001 |
Mean (±SD) of the size of boat mooring scars in seagrass at eight sites around the United Kingdom and the extrapolation of this information to the whole meadow based upon a count of the number of moorings present in seagrass.
| Number of scars assessed | Mean scar area (m2) | StdDev of area (m2) | Total number of scars | Estimated damage to seagrass (m2) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fowey | 21 | 41.7 | 20.7 | 21 | 876.4 |
| Poole harbor | 10 | 139.9 | 193.9 | 70 | 9790.2 |
| Porthdinllaen | 9 | 114.1 | 52.2 | 48 | 5478.4 |
| Salcombe | 6 | 19.5 | 5.4 | 21 | 409.5 |
| St. Marys, Scilly | 68 | 73.7 | 70.7 | 142 | 10458.3 |
| St. Mawes | 5 | 318.8 | 252.8 | 8 | 2550.4 |
| Studland Bay | 13 | 75.2 | 48.5 | 20 | 1504.769 |
| Helford | 167.6 | 229.4 | 36 | 6033.6 | |
| 37101 | |||||
Summary of the available literature examining boat mooring impacts on seagrass.
| Name of paper | Author(s) and year | Peer reviewed | Key findings | Seagrass species and location |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Effect of boat moorings on seagrass beds near Perth, Western Australia | Peer reviewed | Seagrass loss studied in three regions, the total seagrass loss due to moorings in these regions is 5.4 ha. | ||
| Seagrass loss associated with boat moorings at Rottnest Island, Western Australia | Peer reviewed | Eighteen percent of seagrass lost between 1941 and 1992, this is due to moorings. | ||
| Monitoring environmental impacts of recreational boat anchoring on eelgrass ( | Gray | No loss of seagrass due to moorings. Invertebrate diversity and abundance lower in areas with moorings and high levels of recreational boat use. | ||
| BACI design reveals the decline of the seagrass | Peer reviewed | Shoot density and rhizome baring negatively impacted by the mooring system used in Prelo cove. | ||
| The impacts of anchoring and mooring in seagrass, Studland Bay, Dorset, United Kingdom | Peer reviewed | Observed that areas of seagrass are kept clear (∼30 m2) due to swinging moorings. Limited quantification. | ||
| Management of the seagrass bed at Porthdinllaen Initial investigation into the use of alternative mooring systems | Gray | Ten meters scar radius around each mooring, leading to 4.5% direct loss of bed. | ||
| Porthdinllaen seagrass bed, Pen Llyn a’r Sarnau SAC: a survey of moorings in the outer harbor and their impact on the seagrass 2012 | Gray | Density and canopy height 25 and 36% lower between 5 and 10 m away from the mooring. No change in density or canopy height after 10 m. | ||
| A comparison of the impact of “seagrass-friendly” boat mooring systems on | Peer reviewed | Swing moorings led to a 9 m radius bar patch in seagrass, screw moorings had little impact. Scar size was 254 m2. | ||
| Estimating losses of | Gray | Amount of damage increases with depth and is typically greater in beds of | ||
| Losses and recovery of organic carbon from a seagrass ecosystem following disturbance | Peer reviewed | Fifty years after disturbance from moorings limited recovery present | ||
| Impact of mooring activities on carbon stocks in seagrass meadows | Peer reviewed | 1.3 and 0.9 ha of seagrass lost at two different sites due to moorings. Organic carbon stores have been compromised due to these moorings. No quantification at each mooring. |