To Leave or Not to Leave: The Heart Cockle and Green Macroalgae Blooms
Published June 4, 2018
Most ecological studies have their challenges, but EPA researcher Ted DeWitt and his colleagues ran into a new one: the mollusks they were studying kept escaping the experimental enclosures they set up.
The escapees were part of an EPA study on the environmental impacts of increased nutrients reaching aquatic ecosystems. Nutrient pollution is a widespread, costly, and challenging environmental problem for much of the US. When too much nitrogen and phosphorus enter the water, algae can grow so fast that they overwhelm the natural balance of the ecosystem. These significant increases in algae harm water quality, food resources, and habitats, and decrease the oxygen that fish and other aquatic life need to survive. In urban areas, nutrient pollution and excessive algae are often the result of human influences, such as fertilizer runoff. But in small estuaries of the US Pacific Northwest, seasonal blooms of green macroalgae are primarily associated with natural nutrient input, such as from ocean upwelling.This gave EPA researchers the perfect environment to study the effects of macroalgal blooms on an ecosystem, without the additional influence of toxic chemical co-contaminants that are often present in more populated areas. In the Pacific Northwest, bivalve mollusks (e.g., clams, oysters, mussels, scallops) are an important part of the local economy. The heart cockle, or Clinocardium nuttallii, is one of the most sought after bivalve species by the regional fisheries. In an EPA study published in 2017, researchers looked at the relationship between the heart cockles in Yaquina Bay, Oregon, and naturally driven blooms of macroalgae.
For twelve weeks, researchers observed cockles in either the presence or absence of the green macroalgae within experimental field enclosures. The cockles being observed were kept in a ‘cockle corral’ at the center of the mesh-sided PVC enclosures to contain the cockles under a mat of green macroalgae. Results of the experiment found that green macroalgae mats had a substantial effect on the burial depth, growth, and survival of cockles. In laboratory experiments, the researchers observed that an excess of macroalgae caused the cockles to emerge from the sediment that they were buried in, primarily due to the mechanical pressure of the macroalgae. In the field experiment, a majority of the cockles under the green macroalgae mats not only emerged from the sediment, but ‘jumped’ over the cockle corral and relocated to the edges of the macroalgae mats at the cage walls. The cockles that were able to jump over the five-centimeter corral survived, but the ones that did not move had a higher mortality rate.
But relocating from under a macroalgae layer comes with a price. The researchers showed that this emergence from the sediment increased the cockles’ risk of mortality from elevated air temperatures and predation.
Some quantities of green macroalgae are necessary for benthic invertebrate communities: it provides habitat for some motile species, a food source for others, and may serve to reduce desiccation by reducing evaporation of surficial sediments. But too much green macroalgae, as produced by elevated nutrients in coastal waters, can be deadly as shown in this study. Parsing out the direct and indirect effects of nutrient pollution and co-contaminants in the ecosystem is an important part of protecting it. Because of the unique setting of this study, the results will help establish a baseline for understanding the effects of nutrient pollution on important fishery species, like the heart cockle.
See the cockle 'jumping' behavior in the video below:
Footage of cockle ‘jumping’ behavior in response to the simulated pressure from a thick macroalgae mat - captured by the researchers during a preliminary laboratory experiment.