Abstract

The construction of artificial structures, such as seawalls, is increasing globally, resulting in loss of habitat complexity and native species biodiversity. There is increasing interest in mitigating this biodiversity loss by adding topographic habitat to these structures, and/or seeding them with habitat-forming species. Settlement tile experiments, comparing colonisation of species to more and less complex habitats, have been used to inform eco-engineering interventions prior to their large-scale implementation. Most studies have focused on applying one type of intervention (either adding habitat structure or seeding with native organisms), so it is unclear whether there are greater benefits to biodiversity when multiple interventions are combined. Using a fully orthogonal experiment, we assessed the independent and interactive effects of habitat structure (flat vs. crevice/ridges) and seeding with native oysters (unseeded vs. seeded) on the biodiversity of four different functional groups (sessile and mobile taxa, cryptobenthic and pelagic fishes). Concrete tiles (flat unseeded, flat seeded, complex unseeded and complex seeded) were deployed at two sites in Sydney Harbour and monitored over 12 months, for the survival and colonisation of oysters and the species density and abundances of the four functional groups. The survival of seeded oysters was greater on the complex than flat tiles, at one of the two sites, due to the protective role of crevices. Despite this, after 12 months, the species density of sessile invertebrates and the percentage cover of seeded and colonising oysters did not differ between complex and seeded tiles each of which supported more of these variables than the flat unseeded tiles. In contrast, the species density of mobile invertebrates and cryptobenthic fishes and the MaxN of pelagic fishes, at 1 month, were only positively influenced by seeding with oysters, which provided food as well as habitat. Within the complex seeded and unseeded tiles, there was a greater species density of sessile taxa, survival and percentage cover of oysters in the crevices, which were more humid and darker at month 12, had lower high temperature extremes at months 1 and 12, than on the ridges or flat tiles. Our results suggest that eco-engineering projects which seek to maximise the biodiversity of multiple functional groups on seawalls, should apply a variety of different microhabitats and habitat-forming species, to alter the environmental conditions available to organisms.

Highlights

  • Habitat complexity, the physical structure of an environment, is one of the key drivers of species biodiversity [1,2,3]

  • The most abundant taxa identified during the in-situ sampling were for each of the four main groups: the barnacle Elminius modestus, the conniwink Bembicium nanum; the oyster blenny, Omobranchus anolius and the yellowfin bream Acanthopagrus australis

  • Except for the number of live seeded S. glomerata and the abundance of mobile taxa, there was no significant difference in the effects of treatments between sites (S2–S4 Tables), allowing sites to be pooled together for the post-hoc tests

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Summary

Introduction

The physical structure of an environment, is one of the key drivers of species biodiversity [1,2,3]. Habitat complexity may influence species diversity, species density and abundances by weakening predator-prey interactions [8], by dampening the effects of disturbance [9], by determining the range of organismal body sizes that can be supported by an environment [4, 10], and by intercepting and retaining organic matter [11]. There is increasing interest in how complexity might be incorporated into the design of urban marine structures so as to enhance their ecological value [16,17,18,19] Both the addition of topographic habitat structure (e.g. grooves, pits, ledges, water retaining structures; hereafter referred to as habitat structure) and habitat-forming species (e.g., corals, bivalves and seaweeds) have been proposed as mechanisms by which the biodiversity of these structures might be enhanced [19]

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