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Research Priorities

Shellfish reef restoration research in Pumicestone Passage

Small scale scientific trials discovered much potential for restoration of subtidal shellfish reefs in Pumicestone Passage.  Initial data from 2014 found substantial recruitment of oysters (Fig. 1) fish and invertebrates to these areas.   Clumps of 1000’s of fish eggs were observed only in shellfish reef material taken from subtidal collectors (Fig 2).

oyster spat

Fig. 1.
In 2014, clean substrate placed in subtidal areas at the right time of year attracted large numbers of newly settled oyster spat from the plankton.

FishEggs

Fig. 2.
Within weeks, thousands of fish eggs were deposited on new shellfish reef material, but only in subtidal areas.

    Invertebrates such as mud crabs and small black grapsid crabs were 4 to 5 times (400-500%) more abundant in shellfish reef material held in subtidal collectors. Repeating these experiments in 2015 found 2600% more invertebrates in subtidal reef material compared to intertidal controls as well as 1000’s more fish larvae (Figure 3). The results of the field trials were published in Proceedings of the Royal Society of QLD.

These data suggest improvements in fish and invertebrate biomass upwards of 500-1000% (or more) could be expected if subtidal shellfish reefs could be restored in Pumicestone Passage on a large scale. This would be a similar result to those described in previous shellfish reef restoration projects conducted overseas such as oyster reefs in the USA and mussel reefs in New Zealand.

Fig 3. Micro trials conducted in 2015 again found 1000's of fish larvae on oyster shell deployed subtidally.

Fig 3. Micro trials conducted in 2015 again found 1000’s of fish larvae and 2600% more invertebrates on shellfish reef material deployed subtidally.

These sorts of results have lead to development of shellfish reef restoration projects in many other places including the USA, New Zealand and most recently, in Port Phillip Bay, Victoria.

For full scale trials in Pumicestone Passage, a structured research program is being undertaken to assess not only changes in fisheries productivity, but also uptake of nutrients by shellfish reefs  if we are to achieve the ultimate goal of using environmental offset models to fund full scale reef restoration efforts.  Under co-ordination of SEQ Catchments we have received funding from Moreton Bay Regional Council, Unity Water, Landcare, OzFish Unlimited, BCF and Pumicestone Passage Fish Restocking Association and completed Phase 1 (seafloor surveys and video transects) to identify the most suitable sites for restoration trials (see map page).  We have now deployed the trial reefs which signals the beginning of phase 2 of the R&D plan.

Some of the results of the trials have been exciting, including a doubling of fish numbers in the first 6 months, increasing up to 10 times more fish after 30 months, while invertebrate monitoring after 9 months, 18 months  and 2 years confirmed reliable subtidal recruitment of rock oysters and prolific colonisation by various reef dwelling invertebrates, but also damage to patch reefs from careless anchoring. 

Videos of various fish species browsing on the trial patch reefs can be found at these links for patch reefs, crate reefs and BESE reef modules compared to non-restored areas.  Transects of the larger patch reefs deployed in 2018 showed after 8 weeks they were securely in place and accumulating invertebrates and fish, while invertebrate surveys after 3 months, 6 months,  9 months and 12 months suggest the new trial reefs are establishing healthy invertebrate populations which include several species of rock oysters, as well as healthy fish populations.   To help protect the trial shellfish reefs from damage, we ask that water users DO NOT ANCHOR in the trial area.

Phase 1 – Detailed Design and Approvals

Task Who (Lead) Indicative Budget
(Ex GST)
Output
Sea Floor Survey – Detailed surveying   of sea floor in priority site identified in prefeasibility analysis  TBA $13,000 High quality dataset to be used in development of approval/detailed experimental design
Oyster settlement studies – Conduct studies to precisely determine times of peak natural oyster spat settlement Local oyster farmers/DigsFish $6000 Data on peaks of natural oyster settlement to inform planning for Phase 2 (R&D)
Project Steering Committee – Coordinate and facilitate a project steering committee (relevant state agencies, local council, community) SEQ Catchments $3000 Bureaucratic support for the project and guidance in approval process and detailed design.
Approvals Process – Liaise with state agencies to map out   approvals process (may include Development Approval, Designation of area as      Special Activity Area  or other) SEQ Catchments/ Digsfish/ Sunfish $14500 Submission of project plan into approval process for consideration by authorities
Budget and Experimental Design – Develop detailed experimental design and budget based on goals of project and discussions with consent agencies. Digsfish/SEQ Catchments/USC/ Sunfish $10000 Detailed experimental design and budget
Information evening –  held at Toorbul with local community and interested parties to discuss the concept and build awareness and support in the broader community – also to understand any constraints from their perspective SEQ Catchments, TFSA $3500 Broader community awareness and understanding of any constraints which will need to feed into the approvals process
TOTAL  PHASE 1 $50,000  

Phase 2 – Research and Development

Task Who (Lead) Indicative Budget
(ex GST)
Output
Baseline monitoring  – Conduct baseline surveys of biodiversity, biomass and     disease prior to reef restocking (includes community involvement) USC $50,000 Baseline data collected for later comparative purposes
Shellfish reef trials – Examine several different methods of shellfish reef construction (different materials, structure/relief/water depth, maintained         or set and forget) USC, Local oyster farmers,PPFSA, DigsFish, OzFish, Sunfish $100,000 (plus $50,000 from TFSA) Determine most effective/cost effective methods for restoring shellfish reefs under local conditions
Scientific monitoring in field- of shellfish growth, survival, diseases, and fisheries productivity (recruitment of fish and invertebrates, seagrass coverage, recreational catch rates)  (includes community involvement) USC, Local oyster farmers,  PPFSA, DigsFish, OzFish, BCF $100,000 Determine effectiveness of restored reefs for improvements in fisheries productivity /catch rates
Scientific monitoring in lab – measure carbon and nitrogen uptake , water quality improvements (clarity) in tank trials JCU $60,000 + Determine effectiveness of restored reefs for  improving water quality.  Data to be used to develop environmental offset models
TOTAL PHASE 2   $310,000 +, plus $50K from TFSA  

Phase 3 – Scale up to full scale reef restoration

Task Who (Lead) Indicative budget
(ex GST)
Output
Environmental offset models–  Develop models based on data from Phase 2 TBA $60,000 Environmental offset models developed
Scaling up – Broader implementation of shellfish reef restoration in Pumicestone Passage and other areas in Moreton Bay   (includes community involvement) Currently not permitted. We need restoration to become an approved activity in Moreton Bay Marine Park $1,000,000 + (development offsets ?) Restoration of shellfish reefs in Pumicestone Passage and Moreton Bay at an ecologically meaningful scale

Comments

  1. Rod R says

    July 25, 2015 at 11:37 am

    It’s great that people are finally looking to restore the natural ecological balance in the Passage.

Restoring oysters in Chesapeake Bay

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  • Oyster recycling – an important part of restoration
  • Pumicestone Passage Shellfish Reef Transect A
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  • Shellfish reef restoration in Port Phillip Bay
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Blogroll

  • A creek to coast feature on our project

Interesting sites

  • A creek to coast feature on our project
  • A news item on our project
  • A video of the incredible oyster reef (Chesapeake Bay)
  • A video on how shellfish reefs help estuaries
  • A video on oyster filtration
  • ABC article on Australia's first oyster gardening initiative
  • ABC radio interviews on Pumicestone Passage
  • Bream and tarwhine associating with experimental reef modules
  • Chesapeake Bay Program – Restoring Oyster Reefs
  • DigsFish Services
  • Fish love shellfish reef research in Pumicestone Passage
  • Indigenous Elder Fred Palin's Oyster presentation
  • Marine Ecology Education Indigenous Corporation (MEEIC)
  • Oyster recycling – an important part of restoration
  • Pumicestone Passage Shellfish Reef Transect A
  • Pumicestone Passage Shellfish Reef Transect B
  • Shellfish reef restoration in Port Phillip Bay
  • The Nature Conservancy – Restoring oyster reefs

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