Abstract

Dredging increases suspended sediment concentrations (SSCs), causing elevated water turbidity (cloudiness) and light attenuation. Close to dredging, low light periods can extend over many days, affecting phototrophic epibenthic organisms like corals. To improve the ability to predict and manage dredging impacts, we tested the response of corals to an extended period of elevated turbidity using an automated sediment dosing system that precisely controlled SSCs and adjusted light availability accordingly. Replicates of four common species of corals encompassing different morphologies were exposed to turbidity treatments of 0–100 mg L−1 SSC, corresponding to daily light integrals of 12.6 to 0 mol quanta m−2 d−1, over a period of ∼7 weeks. Symbiotic dinoflagellate density and algal pigment concentration, photosynthetic yields, lipid concentrations and ratios and growth varied among the turbidity treatments, with corals exhibiting photoacclimation within low turbidity treatments. A range of physiological responses were observed within the high turbidity treatments (low light), including bleaching and changes in lipid levels and ratios. Most corals, except P. damicornis, were capable of adjusting to a turbidity treatment involving a mean light level of 2.3 mol photons m−2 d−1 in conjunction with a SSC of 10 mg L−1 over the 7 week period.

Highlights

  • Dredging increases suspended sediment concentrations (SSCs), causing elevated water turbidity and light attenuation

  • Four coral species were exposed to six turbidity treatments for 42 d in an aquarium-based study using an automated sediment dosing system regulated by a programmable logic controller (PLC, Fig. 1a)

  • Treatments ranged from SSCs of 0, 2, 5, 10, 30 and 100 mg L−1 with the light levels in each treatment adjusted to approximate light levels that would occur at 5–6 m depth at the SSC, based on light profiles collected during a dredging program and described in[7] (Fig. 1b)

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Summary

Introduction

Dredging increases suspended sediment concentrations (SSCs), causing elevated water turbidity (cloudiness) and light attenuation. Differences in algal symbiont density at the end of the experiment reflected the observed colour differences, with the two highest turbidity (lowest DLI) treatments having the lowest values across all species (Fig. 3c, black circles).

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