Abstract

Responses of benthic infauna to large scale disturbance by dredged material placement were studied at eight paired (placement and reference) areas in Corpus Christi Bay, Texas in 1995 and 1996. Total infaunal abundance, taxa richness, and the biomass of annelids and molluscs in placement areas no longer differed from that of reference areas approximately one year after placement. Annual secondary production for annelids and molluscs did not differ between placement and reference areas, however mean (± standard error) total annual secondary production at reference areas (53.6 ± 5.8 g AFDW/m 2/yr) was greater than that of placement areas (26.2 ± 2.5 g AFDW/m 2/yr) due to higher brittle star densities in reference areas. Differences in community structure between placement and reference areas returned to pre-placement levels one year after disturbance. The magnitude of changes in sediment grain size related to disturbance was positively correlated with the degree of convergence of placement area communities with pre-placement and reference communities. Sediment compaction was consistently associated with infaunal taxonomic composition (BIOENV) and increased linearly with time after disturbance. The use of the term “recovery” with reference to recolonization of dredging-related disturbance implies a return to pre-placement ecological conditions that are frequently neither a reality nor a practical expectation for areas that are subject to repeated disturbances. Our characterization of biological responses to dredged material disturbance targeted benchmarks that were linked to both pre-disturbance conditions and differences between disturbed and neighboring undisturbed areas and indicate that impacts persisted less than one year.

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