Title: Evaluating Success of Oyster Restoration
1Evaluating Success of Oyster Restoration
- Deriving Benchmarks
- From Natural Populations
Hadley, N. H., L.D. Coen, V. Shervette, and M.
Hodges
2- Success depends on your goals
- Harvestable product
- Ecosystem services
- Public awareness
- Sustainability may be an over-riding goal which
applies to all
3Evaluating Success Based on Goals
- When can/should success be determined?
- What constitutes success?
- Multiple year classes
- Size/density comparable to natural populations
- How do you establish the targets?
- Habitat functioning
- Harvestable oysters
- Large percentage of market size oysters
- This does not reflect natural populations
patterns and may never be achievable - Ecosystem services
- Many are difficult to measure
- Develop at different rates
- Habitat functioning may be inferred from presence
of other species but does not necessarily depend
on having oysters present
4Evaluating Success Based on Goals
- When can/should success be determined?
- Multiple year classes
- Recruitment
- Survival/growth
- Size/density comparable to natural populations
(convergence) - Retention of hard substrate for continued
recruitment
Sustainability
5Size Frequencies on 1 and 3 Year Old Reefs Fall
2004
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7Size Frequencies on 2 and 3 Year Old Reefs Fall
2004
8Size Frequency of Oysters on 2 and 3 Year Old
Reefs Fall 2005
9Size Frequency of Oysters on 2 and 3 Year Old
Reefs Fall 2005
10Size/density comparable to natural
populations Whats your benchmark?
- Reference reefs
- Do they exist?
- Are they good?
- Long-term datasets
- Mean values
- Percentiles
- What proportion of natural reefs are in good
condition? - Classifying natural reefs along a continuum of
goodness
11Reference reefs
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13Targets based on population means
14Targets based on population means
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1766 of reefs were fair or better Overall Rating
Fair
27 Reefs were less than 3 years old at time of
assessment.
18Reefs sampled at 3 4 years
19Alternative approach Classify Natural Reefs
20Strata E Excellent?
21Very Good
Good
Fair
Poor
22Characteristics of Natural Intertidal Oyster
Populations in South Carolina
- Few large oysters usually less than 20
- High recruitment usually 50 of populations
- Mean size for all strata ranges from 25 35 mm
- High variability within and among sites
- High variability among years
- A good reef one year may seem like a poor
reef in another year
23Relative frequency of occurrence of different
strata in SC
gt50
Total beds classified 2519
Ben Dyar 12 June 2006
24Establishing Success Benchmarks
- What proportion of natural reefs are in good
condition? - Very Good 5 - Stratas A and E
- Good 37 - Stratas F and G
- Fair 38 - Stratas F1 and C
- Poor -19 - Stratas D and W
25Pinckney 3 Years
Population mean Fair Strata Mean Fair
Not yet converging
26Edisto 3 Years
Population means Poor Strata Means Fair
Different from all defined strata
27Trask 3 Years
Population means Good Percentiles Good
Strata convergence Similar to G, may reach A
28Palmetto 3 Years
Population means Good Percentiles Good
Strata Convergence Similar to A or E
Strata E Excellent? Or overcrowded
29Dataw - 3 Years
Population means Fair Percentiles Good
Strata Convergence Better than C, may reach G
30- 72 of planted area remained at the end of the
study - 77 of sites were fair or better
- Overall Rating Good
3147 of sites were above average 76 of sites
were average or better Overall Rating Good
32Shortcomings of Using Population Means or
Percentiles
- Targetting mediocrity?
- Site rankings all similar
- Even one year old sites rank fair
- No definition for Excellent
33CONCLUSIONS
- Size frequency of restored populations is useful
for evaluating rate of development and
sustainability. - Using natural population means or percentiles as
targets may be striving for mediocrity. - Stratifying natural populations may provide more
meaningful targets and allows us to examine
development trajectories. - Success ratings for large and small-scale
restored sites ranging in age from 3 to 6 years
are similar regardless of which of these targets
are used - Approximately 25 of restoration sites examined,
both large and small scale, appear to be failures
with little potential for development of
sustainable populations of oysters.
34Future Directions
- vertical coverage
- Confidence limits
- Validation at natural sites
- Test targets in other geographic areas
- Habitat functioning
- Diversity indices
- Transient fauna
- Weighting of metrics
- Relate success to site characteristics
35Evaluation of Reef Success
- Footprint how much of the shell area remained?
- Resemblance to natural populations
- Quantity of oysters
- Size of oysters
- Percentage of recruits
- Percentage of large oysters
- Average of footprint and population scores
composite score
36Conclusions
- A total of 76 reefs were constructed at 32 sites,
totally 9 acres - Overall 72 of reef area remains (Good)
- 77 of sites had average or better shell
retention (Good) - 64 of reefs fair or good compared to natural
populations after 1-4 years (Fair) - Composite success rating Good
37Acknowledgements
- Shellfish Research Section personnel who have
measured thousands of oysters each year to
generate this dataset. - All the volunteers who helped build and sample
the reefs! - Funded by