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Relationship of biological communities to habitat structure on the largest remnant flat oyster reef (<i>Ostrea angasi</i>) in Australia

Version 2 2025-10-26, 23:36
Version 1 2023-05-20, 15:21
journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-26, 23:36 authored by Christine CrawfordChristine Crawford, Graham EdgarGraham Edgar, CL Gillies, G Heller-Wagner
Oyster reef restoration is a growing field in Australia, yet formal descriptions of associated biological communities for reefs created by native flat oysters (<i>Ostrea angasi</i>) do not currently exist. Native flat oysters once formed extensive and complex three-dimensional habitats in bays and estuaries across southern Australia until indiscriminate fishing, sedimentation and disease led to their near disappearance. To determine the diversity and abundance on naturally occurring oyster reefs, we sampled four sites on the last known naturally occurring oyster reef ecosystem, which resides in north-eastern Tasmania, and compared them to the surrounding soft sediment regions. Assemblages were related to environmental variables to determine whether consistent patterns were present. Oyster reef sites contained three times the faunal abundance of the surrounding soft sediment regions. Abundance among echinoderms, arthropods, molluscs and fish was much elevated, whereas annelids showed similar levels of abundance but differed in terms of species composition. These results show that oyster reefs do support abundant and diverse assemblages, emphasising the probable loss of community-level biodiversity associated with their historical decline around southern Australia.

History

Publication title

Marine and Freshwater Research

Volume

71

Issue

8

Pagination

972-983

ISSN

1323-1650

Department/School

IMAS Directorate, Ecology and Biodiversity, Fisheries and Aquaculture

Publisher

C S I R O Publishing

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

150 Oxford St, Po Box 1139, Collingwood, Australia, Victoria, 3066

Rights statement

Copyright 2019 CSIRO

Socio-economic Objectives

180601 Assessment and management of terrestrial ecosystems