We assessed the impact of salmon farms on the megabenthos associated with muddy habitats using a novel drop-and-drift video camera approach. Megabenthic burrowers and suspension feeders were adversely affected by farm proximity, as indicated by modelled benthic flux of dry solids (DSFlux, g m -2 yr -1). The burrow-count threshold DSflux was 400, beyond which burrow density declined rapidly. Suspension feeder densities were reduced by a factor of 4 in close proximity (DSFlux > 8000 g m -2 yr -1) to the salmon farms, but only where the sediment was relatively muddy. In terms of suspension feeders, threshold levels of DSFlux varied between sites, ranging from 12 to 665 g m -2 yr -1. There was no evidence that vagile predator/scavengers were either attracted to, or repelled by, salmon farms. We conclude that burrowers and suspension feeders were relatively resilient to salmon farms in muddy, sea-loch habitats and that detectable im pacts did not exceed 100 m from the cage boundary. © Inter-Research 2012.
CITATION STYLE
Wilding, T. A., Cromey, C. J., Nickell, T. D., & Hughes, D. J. (2012). Salmon farm impacts on muddy-sediment megabenthic assemblages on the west coast of Scotland. Aquaculture Environment Interactions, 2(2), 145–156. https://doi.org/10.3354/aei00038
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