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Taxonomic and functional responses of macrofaunal assemblage provide insight into ecological impacts of bottom-based Manila clam aquaculture

  • Xin Sun
  • , Jianyu Dong
  • , Yuyang Zhang
  • , Qipeng Zhan
  • , Xiayang Ding
  • , Yong Chen
  • , Xiumei Zhang
  • Ocean University of China
  • Zhejiang Ocean University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Understanding ecological impacts of bottom-based clam aquaculture can improve its management. In this study, taxonomic and functional macrofaunal assemblage were evaluated for two clam farms located in Laizhou Bay, China. Beta diversity and factors potentially regulating the dissimilarity of macrofauna were estimated. Both taxonomic and functional composition of macrofauna showed large differences between the clam farm and the control area. Functional dissimilarity within the clam farms was found to be nestedness and negatively correlated to local clam abundance. Additionally, the cultured clam enhanced the functional richness but made the macrofaunal assemblage more fragile against species or function loss. This effect would increase with clam abundance, which highlights the importance of identifying optimal clam culture intensity in developing a bottom-based clam aquaculture program.

Original languageEnglish
Article number113270
JournalMarine Pollution Bulletin
Volume174
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2022

Keywords

  • Beta diversity
  • Biological trait
  • Clam aquaculture
  • Ecological impact
  • Functional diversity
  • Macrofauna

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