Data for Use of Shell Hash to Mitigate the Acidification of Intertidal Sediments - Doyle and Bendell

Our objectives were twofold; (1) to determine if the addition of shell hash to intertidal sediments would mitigate porewater acidification, and (2) whether its effectiveness was dependent on the type of sediment as described by organic matter (OM) and particle grain size (PGS). Field experiments wer...

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Main Authors: Doyle, B., Bendell, L.I.
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://summit.sfu.ca/item/21722
id ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:21722
record_format openpolar
spelling ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:21722 2023-05-15T17:51:33+02:00 Data for Use of Shell Hash to Mitigate the Acidification of Intertidal Sediments - Doyle and Bendell Doyle, B. Bendell, L.I. 2022-01-09 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/21722 English eng http://summit.sfu.ca/item/21722 Dataset 2022 ftsimonfu 2022-04-07T18:44:16Z Our objectives were twofold; (1) to determine if the addition of shell hash to intertidal sediments would mitigate porewater acidification, and (2) whether its effectiveness was dependent on the type of sediment as described by organic matter (OM) and particle grain size (PGS). Field experiments were conducted at two sites within Burrard Inlet, British Columbia; Maplewood Mudflats (MM), high in OM and silt and Whey-ah-Wichen/Cates Park (WAW), low in OM and an equal PGS among very coarse, coarse, fine sand and silt. Shell hash was added to triplicate treatment plots matched with triplicate controls at each site and porewater pH measured at flood and ebb tide over 8 tidal cycles. Sampling occurred during June and July when tidal cycles were at their maximum inundation and exposure. Porewater pH was significantly greater for ebb versus flood tide and also between sites with MM significantly lower (7.59) as compared to WAW (8.03). Although pH was not mitigated by the shell hash, for WAW, variation in pH was reduced as compared to MM, as indicated by coefficients of variation over the 6-week sampling period. We suggest that the application of shell hash to reduce the impact of ocean acidification (OA) on intertidal sediments, will be site dependent. The combined processes of eutrophication in sediments with high OM and respiration of infauna, especially at high densities could act in concert with OA to create an intertidal region unsuitable for bivalve larvae settlement and development.4 Dataset Ocean acidification Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University) Doyle ENVELOPE(-65.300,-65.300,-66.000,-66.000)
institution Open Polar
collection Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University)
op_collection_id ftsimonfu
language English
description Our objectives were twofold; (1) to determine if the addition of shell hash to intertidal sediments would mitigate porewater acidification, and (2) whether its effectiveness was dependent on the type of sediment as described by organic matter (OM) and particle grain size (PGS). Field experiments were conducted at two sites within Burrard Inlet, British Columbia; Maplewood Mudflats (MM), high in OM and silt and Whey-ah-Wichen/Cates Park (WAW), low in OM and an equal PGS among very coarse, coarse, fine sand and silt. Shell hash was added to triplicate treatment plots matched with triplicate controls at each site and porewater pH measured at flood and ebb tide over 8 tidal cycles. Sampling occurred during June and July when tidal cycles were at their maximum inundation and exposure. Porewater pH was significantly greater for ebb versus flood tide and also between sites with MM significantly lower (7.59) as compared to WAW (8.03). Although pH was not mitigated by the shell hash, for WAW, variation in pH was reduced as compared to MM, as indicated by coefficients of variation over the 6-week sampling period. We suggest that the application of shell hash to reduce the impact of ocean acidification (OA) on intertidal sediments, will be site dependent. The combined processes of eutrophication in sediments with high OM and respiration of infauna, especially at high densities could act in concert with OA to create an intertidal region unsuitable for bivalve larvae settlement and development.4
format Dataset
author Doyle, B.
Bendell, L.I.
spellingShingle Doyle, B.
Bendell, L.I.
Data for Use of Shell Hash to Mitigate the Acidification of Intertidal Sediments - Doyle and Bendell
author_facet Doyle, B.
Bendell, L.I.
author_sort Doyle, B.
title Data for Use of Shell Hash to Mitigate the Acidification of Intertidal Sediments - Doyle and Bendell
title_short Data for Use of Shell Hash to Mitigate the Acidification of Intertidal Sediments - Doyle and Bendell
title_full Data for Use of Shell Hash to Mitigate the Acidification of Intertidal Sediments - Doyle and Bendell
title_fullStr Data for Use of Shell Hash to Mitigate the Acidification of Intertidal Sediments - Doyle and Bendell
title_full_unstemmed Data for Use of Shell Hash to Mitigate the Acidification of Intertidal Sediments - Doyle and Bendell
title_sort data for use of shell hash to mitigate the acidification of intertidal sediments - doyle and bendell
publishDate 2022
url http://summit.sfu.ca/item/21722
long_lat ENVELOPE(-65.300,-65.300,-66.000,-66.000)
geographic Doyle
geographic_facet Doyle
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation http://summit.sfu.ca/item/21722
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