Ecological role of an offshore industry artificial structure

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Ecological role of an offshore industry artificial structure. / Gates, Andrew; Serpell-Stevens, Amanda; Chandler, Chester et al.
In: Frontiers in Marine Science, Vol. 6, 675, 12.11.2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Gates, A, Serpell-Stevens, A, Chandler, C, Horton, T, Grange, L, Robert, K, Bevan, A & Jones, D 2019, 'Ecological role of an offshore industry artificial structure', Frontiers in Marine Science, vol. 6, 675. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00675

APA

Gates, A., Serpell-Stevens, A., Chandler, C., Horton, T., Grange, L., Robert, K., Bevan, A., & Jones, D. (2019). Ecological role of an offshore industry artificial structure. Frontiers in Marine Science, 6, Article 675. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00675

CBE

Gates A, Serpell-Stevens A, Chandler C, Horton T, Grange L, Robert K, Bevan A, Jones D. 2019. Ecological role of an offshore industry artificial structure. Frontiers in Marine Science. 6:Article 675. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00675

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Gates A, Serpell-Stevens A, Chandler C, Horton T, Grange L, Robert K et al. Ecological role of an offshore industry artificial structure. Frontiers in Marine Science. 2019 Nov 12;6:675. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2019.00675

Author

Gates, Andrew ; Serpell-Stevens, Amanda ; Chandler, Chester et al. / Ecological role of an offshore industry artificial structure. In: Frontiers in Marine Science. 2019 ; Vol. 6.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ecological role of an offshore industry artificial structure

AU - Gates, Andrew

AU - Serpell-Stevens, Amanda

AU - Chandler, Chester

AU - Horton, Tammy

AU - Grange, Laura

AU - Robert, Kathleen

AU - Bevan, Alexander

AU - Jones, Daniel

PY - 2019/11/12

Y1 - 2019/11/12

N2 - Decommissioning of oil and gas infrastructure in all major basins globally has focused attention on its importance as hard substratum on continental shelf and slope habitats. Observational studies are needed to improve understanding of faunal assemblages supported by offshore infrastructure and better predict the effect of removal. Here we present results from visual inspection and physical sampling of a small oil and gas industry structure decommissioned from an oil field in the North East Atlantic. This is supported by observations of similar structures nearby and by photographs of the surrounding seabed from environmental baseline surveys. The structure supported a reasonably high biomass and diversity of invertebrates (>10 kg and > 39 macrofaunal and 17 megafaunal species) and fishes (>20 kg biomass and > 4 species). The invertebrate megafaunal species present on the structure were a sub-set of the hard substratum fauna observed on surrounding seabed. Porifera were absent from the structure. Biological succession in the first two years occurred as follows. Sparse colonies of the hydroid Obelia sp. stet were early colonisers then subsequent development of thick hydroid turf (Obelia sp. stet. and Halecium sp. stet.) supported a diverse invertebrate assemblage (2654 individuals kg wet mass-1) dominated by saddle oysters (Pododesmus squama (Gmelin, 1791) and Heteranomia sp. stet.)) and scale worms (Hormothoe spp.). Percentage cover of hydroid turf varied significantly over the structure, with most growth on sections exposed to strongest currents. Commercially important fish species present around the structure included Gadus morhua (Atlantic cod), Pollachius virens (saithe) and Lophius piscatorius (monkfish). Studies of artificial structures such as this provide much needed data to understand their role in the ecology of seafloor habitats and inform environmental decision making on all stages of industry from exploration to decommissioning. We show that the ecological role of the decommissioned three-dimensional structures was to enhance the biomass of a sub-set of epifaunal invertebrates found in the area. This supported diverse associated macrofaunal organisms, providing a food source for motile invertebrates and fishes in an area where background hard substratum can be lost through the impacts of drilling.

AB - Decommissioning of oil and gas infrastructure in all major basins globally has focused attention on its importance as hard substratum on continental shelf and slope habitats. Observational studies are needed to improve understanding of faunal assemblages supported by offshore infrastructure and better predict the effect of removal. Here we present results from visual inspection and physical sampling of a small oil and gas industry structure decommissioned from an oil field in the North East Atlantic. This is supported by observations of similar structures nearby and by photographs of the surrounding seabed from environmental baseline surveys. The structure supported a reasonably high biomass and diversity of invertebrates (>10 kg and > 39 macrofaunal and 17 megafaunal species) and fishes (>20 kg biomass and > 4 species). The invertebrate megafaunal species present on the structure were a sub-set of the hard substratum fauna observed on surrounding seabed. Porifera were absent from the structure. Biological succession in the first two years occurred as follows. Sparse colonies of the hydroid Obelia sp. stet were early colonisers then subsequent development of thick hydroid turf (Obelia sp. stet. and Halecium sp. stet.) supported a diverse invertebrate assemblage (2654 individuals kg wet mass-1) dominated by saddle oysters (Pododesmus squama (Gmelin, 1791) and Heteranomia sp. stet.)) and scale worms (Hormothoe spp.). Percentage cover of hydroid turf varied significantly over the structure, with most growth on sections exposed to strongest currents. Commercially important fish species present around the structure included Gadus morhua (Atlantic cod), Pollachius virens (saithe) and Lophius piscatorius (monkfish). Studies of artificial structures such as this provide much needed data to understand their role in the ecology of seafloor habitats and inform environmental decision making on all stages of industry from exploration to decommissioning. We show that the ecological role of the decommissioned three-dimensional structures was to enhance the biomass of a sub-set of epifaunal invertebrates found in the area. This supported diverse associated macrofaunal organisms, providing a food source for motile invertebrates and fishes in an area where background hard substratum can be lost through the impacts of drilling.

KW - ecosystem restoration

KW - rigs to reef

KW - Gadus morhua (Teleostei)

KW - artificial reef

KW - oil and gas activity

KW - decommissioning

U2 - 10.3389/fmars.2019.00675

DO - 10.3389/fmars.2019.00675

M3 - Article

VL - 6

JO - Frontiers in Marine Science

JF - Frontiers in Marine Science

SN - 2296-7745

M1 - 675

ER -