Demersal fish use of printed oyster shells as nesting habitat in North Inlet SC

Presentation Type

Event

Full Name of Faculty Mentor

Juliana Harding

Major

Marine Science

Second Major

Biology

Presentation Abstract

Demersal fishes including blennies use empty oyster shells as nesting sites. 3D printer technology was used to create standard nest substrates to describe relationships between blenny habitat use and nest site dimensions. Replicate printed shells of 2 gape widths (5, 7 mm) for each of 2 shell cavity volumes (22.1, 15 ml for Oysters A and B, respectively) were deployed and checked ~biweekly. The first nest substrate deployment (August-December 2018) tested whether or not blennies would use the printed shells. The second deployment (December 2018-present) is evaluating the hypothesis that larger fish select printed shells with larger cavity volume and/or gape width. Printed shells are occupied by blennies. Fish use increased with deployment time. Nesting fishes (average standard length = 48.7 mm, ± 7.1) occupy shells with larger (7 mm) gapes and larger (22.1 ml) volume more frequently. Relationships between shell dimensions and fish use and dimensions will be discussed.

Course

BIOL 499

Location

Brittain Hall, Room 112

Start Date

16-4-2019 5:40 PM

End Date

16-4-2019 6:00 PM

Disciplines

Marine Biology

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS
 
Apr 16th, 5:40 PM Apr 16th, 6:00 PM

Demersal fish use of printed oyster shells as nesting habitat in North Inlet SC

Brittain Hall, Room 112

Demersal fishes including blennies use empty oyster shells as nesting sites. 3D printer technology was used to create standard nest substrates to describe relationships between blenny habitat use and nest site dimensions. Replicate printed shells of 2 gape widths (5, 7 mm) for each of 2 shell cavity volumes (22.1, 15 ml for Oysters A and B, respectively) were deployed and checked ~biweekly. The first nest substrate deployment (August-December 2018) tested whether or not blennies would use the printed shells. The second deployment (December 2018-present) is evaluating the hypothesis that larger fish select printed shells with larger cavity volume and/or gape width. Printed shells are occupied by blennies. Fish use increased with deployment time. Nesting fishes (average standard length = 48.7 mm, ± 7.1) occupy shells with larger (7 mm) gapes and larger (22.1 ml) volume more frequently. Relationships between shell dimensions and fish use and dimensions will be discussed.