Shellfish farming contributes to nutrient removal in coastal and estuarine systems, as bivalves incorporate nutrients into their tissues and shells, which is removed from the marine system on harvest. Fourteen locations around the UK were surveyed to explore geographic variation in carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus content of tissue and shell in blue mussels. Phosphorus in tissue had a significant negative relationship with mean annual seawater temperature for both rope and bottom cultured sites. Per tonne of live mussel, rope culture removed significantly more nitrogen (8.50 ± 0.59 kg) and phosphorus (0.95 ± 0.07 kg) than bottom cultured (5.00 ± 0.013 kg nitrogen and 0.43 ± 0.01 kg phosphorus). Bottom culture, however, provides significantly...
Effects of suspended mussel and infaunal clam cultivation on sediment characteristics, and benthic o...
The spatial and temporal variability of food abundance is likely to be a major factor determining th...
Suspension-feeding bivalves produce biodeposits (faeces and pseudofaeces) that have much higher sink...
Shellfish farming contributes to nutrient removal in coastal and estuarine systems, as bivalves inco...
Bivalve farming can contribute to nutrient removal in coastal and estuarine systems, as bivalves dir...
Blue mussel Mytilus edulis cultures contribute to nutrient cycling in coastal ecosystems. Mussel pop...
The co-cultivation of seaweed alongside shellfish has the potential to regulate local dissolved nutr...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2019Bivalve aquaculture is increasingly being considere...
Eutrophication is one of the largest and most serious global threats to the marine environment. The ...
The United Kingdom's first large-scale, offshore, long-line mussel farm deployed its first ropes in ...
Cultured and wild bivalve stocks provide ecosystem services through regulation of nutrient dynamics;...
The condition and quality of cultured blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) are affected by various environm...
Nutrient loads from the land to the sea must be reduced to combat coastal eutrophication. It has bee...
The EU-water framework directive (WFD) focuses on nutrient reductions to return coastal waters to th...
A growing human population coupled with the need to protect marine ecosystems, requires sources of s...
Effects of suspended mussel and infaunal clam cultivation on sediment characteristics, and benthic o...
The spatial and temporal variability of food abundance is likely to be a major factor determining th...
Suspension-feeding bivalves produce biodeposits (faeces and pseudofaeces) that have much higher sink...
Shellfish farming contributes to nutrient removal in coastal and estuarine systems, as bivalves inco...
Bivalve farming can contribute to nutrient removal in coastal and estuarine systems, as bivalves dir...
Blue mussel Mytilus edulis cultures contribute to nutrient cycling in coastal ecosystems. Mussel pop...
The co-cultivation of seaweed alongside shellfish has the potential to regulate local dissolved nutr...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2019Bivalve aquaculture is increasingly being considere...
Eutrophication is one of the largest and most serious global threats to the marine environment. The ...
The United Kingdom's first large-scale, offshore, long-line mussel farm deployed its first ropes in ...
Cultured and wild bivalve stocks provide ecosystem services through regulation of nutrient dynamics;...
The condition and quality of cultured blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) are affected by various environm...
Nutrient loads from the land to the sea must be reduced to combat coastal eutrophication. It has bee...
The EU-water framework directive (WFD) focuses on nutrient reductions to return coastal waters to th...
A growing human population coupled with the need to protect marine ecosystems, requires sources of s...
Effects of suspended mussel and infaunal clam cultivation on sediment characteristics, and benthic o...
The spatial and temporal variability of food abundance is likely to be a major factor determining th...
Suspension-feeding bivalves produce biodeposits (faeces and pseudofaeces) that have much higher sink...