Elsevier

Aquaculture Reports

Volume 18, November 2020, 100455
Aquaculture Reports

Two cases study of fouling colonization patterns in the Mediterranean Sea in the perspective of integrated aquaculture systems

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aqrep.2020.100455Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Fouling community was assessed in two Mediterranean fish farms.

  • Fouling community end points differ according to local factors.

  • Different species of filter feeders contributed to filtration capability.

  • Polychaete sabellids and mussels dominated the Integrated Aquaculture systems.

Abstract

Fouling assemblage colonizing fish-farms is considered mostly to produce negative impacts causing financial loss. By contrast, large evidences emerged on the bioremediation role by biofouling associated to aquaculture facilities, even if the fouling assemblages thriving in the water column was poorly investigated. The aim of the present work was to investigate the macrofouling assemblages over one year of immersion, in order to single out the fouling species, which play the most remarkable role for the bioremediation of the marine areas affected by aquaculture activities. With this in mind, we studied the fouling community dynamics in two Mediterranean maricultural facilities, respectively in the Mar Grande of Taranto (Ionian Sea) and in the Gulf of Gaeta (Tyrrhenian Sea), using the same experimental design and time frame. Two experiments were carried out using artificial panels anchored to two finfish cages. The one-year old fouling communities in the two sites were compared at four seasons of immersion, four submersion durations and three depths, both communities from structural and functional points of view. Notwithstanding the quite similar species composition of fouling of the two sites, the biofouling showed the highest biodiversity in the Mar Grande of Taranto. In the Gulf of Gaeta mussels, Mytilus galloprovincialis, dominated at all the times and depths, whilst in the Mar Grande of Taranto they were especially abundant at the surface with the deepest panels being largely colonized by polychaete sabellids. The co-occurrence of the filter-feeders Mytilus-sabellids recorded in the Gulf of Taranto also highlighted the highest filtration capability. Our results suggest two different fouling assemblages as candidates for bioremediation in integrated multitrophic aquaculture facilities: both a monospecific system dominated by mussels and a multi-specific system with sabellids and mussels as most abundant filter-feeders.

Keywords

Biofilter
Mariculture
Biofouling
Filtration capability
Tyrrhenian Sea
Ionian Sea

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