PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study puts some mussels into Bay restoration

Study puts some mussels into Bay restoration
2014-09-08
(Press-News.org) Restoring oysters—and their ability to filter large volumes of water—is widely seen as a key way to improve the health of Chesapeake Bay. New research makes this calculus even more appealing, showing that the mussels that typically colonize the nooks and crannies of a restored oyster reef can more than double its overall filtration capacity.

The study—by researchers at the University of Maryland, the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, and the Virginia Institute of Marine Science—appears as the cover story in the most recent issue of Restoration Ecology.

"Many efforts to restore coastal habitat focus on planting just one species, such as oysters, mangroves, or seagrass," says UMD's Keryn Gedan, the study's lead author. "However, our research shows that the positive effects of diverse ecosystems can be much greater. In the case of oyster reefs, commonly associated species such as mussels may multiply the water quality benefits of restoration by filtering more and different portions of the plankton."

"Estimates of the ecosystem services provided by a restoration project are used to justify, prioritize, and evaluate such projects," adds VIMS scientist Lisa Kellogg. "By quantifying the significant role that mussels can play in filtration within an oyster-reef habitat, our work shows that the 'return on investment' for oyster-reef restoration is potentially much higher than commonly thought."

Filtering plankton helps improve water quality because these tiny drifting organisms thrive on the excess nitrogen and other nutrients that humans release into the Bay and its tributaries through farming, wastewater outflow, and the burning of fossil fuels.

"Filtering plankton from the water is the first step towards removing nutrients," says Kellogg. "Although some will be returned to the water column, a significant portion will be removed from the system." Removing plankton also has more direct benefits. Left unchecked, plankton can form dense blooms that shade other aquatic plants such as seagrass, and can lead to low-oxygen "dead zones" when they die, sink, and decay.

The research team, which also included SERC's Denise Breitburg, based their findings on a combination of laboratory experiments and computer modeling. In the lab, they added phytoplankton of different size classes to tanks containing eastern oysters (Crassostrea virginica) or hooked mussels (Ischadium recurvum), then measured the animals' filtration rates at different temperatures. They then incorporated these measured rates into a simple model and used that to simulate overall filtration for three different restoration scenarios in Harris Creek, Maryland, one of the East Coast's largest oyster-reef restoration sites.

Kellogg's main contribution to the paper was data on the relative abundance of oysters, mussels, and other organisms inhabiting restored oyster reefs collected during her time as a post-doctoral researcher at Maryland's Horn Point Lab. These data, which showed that the biomass of mussels on a restored reef can equal or exceed that of the oysters, were used as baselines for the model projections.

The results of that modeling were clear. "On average," says Gedan, "adding filtration by hooked mussels into our model increased the filtration capacity of the reef by more than two-fold." "Hooked mussels were also twice as effective as oysters at filtering picoplankton," says Breitburg. Picoplankton are the smallest category of marine plankton, ranging from about 1.5 to 3 microns (a human red blood cell is about 5 microns across). Picoplankton are particularly abundant in Chesapeake Bay during summer, with an earlier study from the York River showing they can make up nearly 15% of phytoplankton "biomass" during the warmer months.

"Some have suggested that oyster reef restoration will be less effective than expected in controlling phytoplankton populations because of oysters' inability to filter picoplankton," says Kellogg. "Our discoveries with mussels lessen that concern."

"The mussels' ability to filter the picoplankton indicates that they fill a distinct ecological niche," adds Gedan. "Accounting for both oyster and mussel filtration, large-scale restoration projects like those going on in Chesapeake Bay could significantly control phytoplankton, especially during the summer months, when animals filter the most."

The bottom line, says Gedan, is that "estimates of the ecosystem services provided by just the oysters on an oyster reef may vastly underrepresent the reefs' overall contribution. Because oyster reefs also contain many other filter-feeding species, they will likely benefit water quality much more than previous modeling efforts suggest." Kellogg is now taking this line of research further, studying how another common oyster-reef inhabitant—an organism called a tunicate—might also contribute to gains in water quality. Tunicates, fleshy animals also known as sea squirts, filter plankton and other particles from the water similarly to oysters and mussels.

INFORMATION: END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Study puts some mussels into Bay restoration Study puts some mussels into Bay restoration 2 Study puts some mussels into Bay restoration 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New targets for treating pulmonary hypertension found

2014-09-08
Two new potential therapeutic targets for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension, a deadly disease marked by high blood pressure in the lungs, have been identified by researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Their findings are reported in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. Early symptoms of pulmonary arterial hypertension include shortness of breath and exercise intolerance. As the disease progresses, patients may require oxygen supplementation and lung transplantation. Heart failure can develop and is a major cause of ...

New compound inhibits enzyme crucial to MERS and SARS viruses, with a catch

2014-09-08
Scientists at the University of Illinois, Chicago, have identified a compound that effectively inhibits an enzyme crucial to the viruses that cause Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). The compound appears to have a different method of inhibition in each virus due to slight differences in each virus' enzyme which means finding other compounds that inhibit both may be difficult according to research presented at the 54th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC) an infectious disease meeting ...

How quickly viruses can contaminate buildings and how to stop them

2014-09-08
Using tracer viruses, researchers found that contamination of just a single doorknob or table top results in the spread of viruses throughout office buildings, hotels, and health care facilities. Within 2 to 4 hours, the virus could be detected on 40 to 60 percent of workers and visitors in the facilities and commonly touched objects, according to research presented at the 54th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC), an infectious disease meeting of the American Society for Microbiology. There is a simple solution, though, says Charles ...

A low-energy optical circuit for a new era of technology

2014-09-08
Unlike electronic circuits, optical, or "photonic", circuits work with light rather than electricity, which makes them 10 to 100 times faster. They are also more energy-efficient because they show lower heat loss, better signal-to-noise ratios and are less susceptible to interference. Used especially for communications (e.g. fiber optics), optical circuits may use tiny optical cavities as 'switches' that can block or allow the flow of light, similarly to transistors in electronics. EPFL scientists have now fabricated and experimentally tested a silicon-based 'photonic crystal ...

To admit or not to admit: Variation in hospitalizations from ER costs billions

2014-09-08
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — It sounds like the setup for a joke: Two identical patients go to two different hospital emergency entrances, complaining of the same symptoms. But what happens next is no laughing matter, according to a new University of Michigan study published in the September issue of Health Affairs. While one patient may get treated and released from the emergency department, the other gets sent upstairs to a hospital bed – at a cost of tens of thousands of dollars. In fact, doctors at one hospital may be as much as six times as likely to admit an emergency ...

Scientists reveal cell secret potentially useful for vaccines

Scientists reveal cell secret potentially useful for vaccines
2014-09-08
The best defense is a good offense, especially when it comes to the immune system. The troops that respond to an infection are split into two squadrons, and, until recently, it seemed that the two were independent, without much interaction. Now, in a paper published this week in Nature Immunology, a team of scientists from the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute and the University of Alabama at Birmingham say that the immunology boot camp is more communication-intensive than initially thought — a discovery that could help efforts to produce more effective vaccines. "We ...

Women and health professionals spark new cycle of improving maternal and newborn health

Women and health professionals spark new cycle of improving maternal and newborn health
2014-09-08
Demand for better care by women linked with the expansion of basic services, rather than political pressure, has helped to improve midwifery services in low to middle-income countries, according to international research involving the University of Southampton. An examination of maternal and newborn health systems for the Lancet Series on Midwifery found that after initial investment in maternal and newborn health infrastructure, a virtuous cycle developed in these countries – with increased demand for care leading to the deployment of more midwives, better services, ...

Facial plastic surgery can safely address the major aspects of aging in 1 operation

Facial plastic surgery can safely address the major aspects of aging in 1 operation
2014-09-08
AUGUSTA, Ga. – A total facial rejuvenation that combines three procedures to address the multiple signs of an aging face and neck can be performed safely at one time, a new study shows. Total facial rejuvenation, which combines an extensive facelift to tighten skin and muscle; specialized, midface implants to restore fullness; and laser resurfacing to reduce skin's irregular texture and discoloration, can be safely performed at one time, reports Dr. Achih H. Chen, facial plastic surgeon. Chen, Director of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the Medical ...

Enigmatic Viking fortress discovered in Denmark

Enigmatic Viking fortress discovered in Denmark
2014-09-08
It is the first time for over 60 years that a new Viking fortress is found in Denmark, says curator Nanna Holm of The Danish Castle Centre. Søren Sindbæk, professor of medieval archeology at Aarhus University, explains: "The Vikings have a reputation as a berserker and pirates. It comes as a surprise to many that they were also capable of building magnificent fortresses. The discovery of the new Viking fortress is a unique opportunity to gain new knowledge about Viking war and conflicts, and we get a new chance to examine the Vikings' most famous monuments. " The previously ...

Bureaucracy consumes one-quarter of US hospitals' budgets, twice as much as other nations

2014-09-08
A study of hospital administrative costs in eight nations published today in the September issue of Health Affairs finds that hospital bureaucracy consumed 25.3 percent of hospital budgets in the U.S. in 2011, far more than in other nations. Administrative costs were lowest (about 12 percent) in Scotland and Canada, whose single-payer systems fund hospitals through global, lump-sum budgets, much as a fire department is funded in the U.S. The study is the first analysis of administrative costs across multiple nations with widely varying health systems. It was carried ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

A therapeutic HPV vaccine could eliminate precancerous cervical lesions

Myth busted: Healthy habits take longer than 21 days to set in

Development of next-generation one-component epoxy with high-temperature stability and flame retardancy

Scaling up neuromorphic computing for more efficient and effective AI everywhere and anytime

Make it worth Weyl: engineering the first semimetallic Weyl quantum crystal

Exercise improves brain function, possibly reducing dementia risk

Diamonds are forever—But not in nanodevices

School-based program for newcomer students boosts mental health, research shows

Adding bridges to stabilize quantum networks

Major uncertainties remain about impact of treatment for gender related distress

Likely 50-fold rise in prevalence of gender related distress from 2011-21 in England

US college graduates live an average of 11 years longer than those who never finish high school

Scientists predict what will be top of the crops in UK by 2080 due to climate change

Study: Physical function of patients at discharge linked to hospital readmission rates

7 schools awarded financial grants to fuel student well-being

NYU Tandon research to improve emergency responses in urban areas with support from NVIDIA

Marcus Freeman named 2024 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year

How creating and playing terrific video games can accelerate the battle against cancer

Rooting for resistance: How soybeans tackle nematode invaders is no secret anymore

Beer helps grocery stores tap sales in other categories

New USF study: Surprisingly, pulmonary fibrosis patients with COVID-19 improve

In a landmark study, an NYBG scientist and colleagues find that reforestation stands out among plant-based climate-mitigation strategies as most beneficial for wildlife biodiversity

RSClin® Tool N+ gives more accurate estimates of recurrence risk and individual chemotherapy benefit in node-positive breast cancer

Terahertz pulses induce chirality in a non-chiral crystal

AI judged to be more compassionate than expert crisis responders: Study

Scale-up fabrication of perovskite quantum dots

Adverse childhood experiences influence potentially dangerous firearm-related behavior in adulthood

Bacteria found to eat forever chemicals — and even some of their toxic byproducts

London cabbies’ planning strategies could help inform future of AI

More acidic oceans may affect the sex of oysters

[Press-News.org] Study puts some mussels into Bay restoration