Connecting targets for catchment sediment loads to ecological outcomes for seagrass using multiple lines of evidence

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Lambert, Victoria;Bainbridge, Zoe T.;Collier, Catherine;Lewis, Stephen E.;Adams, Matthew P.;Carter, Alex;Saunders, Megan I.;Brodie, Jon;Turner, Ryan D.R.;Rasheed, Michael A.;O'Brien, Katherine R.
Abstract

Catchment impacts on downstream ecosystems are difficult to quantify, but important for setting management targets. Here we compared 12 years of monitoring data of seagrass area and biomass in Cleveland Bay, northeast Australia, with discharge and associated sediment loads from nearby rivers. Seagrass biomass and area exhibited different trajectories in response to river inputs. River discharge was a slightly better predictor of seagrass indicators than total suspended solid (TSS) loads, indicating that catchment effects on seagrass are not restricted to sediment. Linear relationships between Burdekin River TSS loads delivered over 1–4 years and seagrass condition in Cleveland Bay generated Ecologically Relevant Targets (ERT) for catchment sediment inputs. Our predicted ERTs were comparable to those previously estimated using mechanistic models. This study highlights the challenges of linking catchment inputs to condition of downstream ecosystems, and the importance of integrating a variety of metrics and approaches to increase confidence in ERTs.

Journal

Marine Pollution Bulletin

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Volume

169

ISBN/ISSN

1879-3363

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Pages Count

12

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Publisher

Elsevier

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DOI

10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112494