An Assessment of the Potential Impacts on Zooplankton and Fish of Ocean Dredged Material at the Norfolk Disposal Site

An Assessment of the Potential Impacts on Zooplankton and Fish of Ocean Dredged Material at the Norfolk Disposal Site
Author: Kim Devonald
Publisher:
Total Pages: 64
Release: 1984
Genre:
ISBN:

The potential impacts on fish, fisheries and zooplankton of uncontaminated dredged material disposal at the proposed Norfolk (Virginia) disposal site was assessed through literature search and worst-case impact calculation. Emphasis was placed on analysis of the spatial and temporal distribution of ichthyoplankton and blue crab (Callinectes sapidus) larvae at the disposal site, and in the ocean waters adjacent to Chesapeake Bay. Available evidence indicated that the proposed site does not have any special importance to plankton, fish or fisheries. Most planktonic species have broad spatial distributions, and local impacts from dredged material disposal are therefore expected to have negligible effects on plankton populations. However, blue crab larvae and Atlantic croaker (Micropogon undulatus) larvae of the lower Chesapeake Bay and adjacent coastal ocean exhibit spatial distributions that may be determined in part by current patterns that retain the larvae in the vicinity of the Chesapeake Bay mouth. Therefore, the distribution of larvae available for recruitment may be spatially limited relative to most planktonic organisms. Based on available information on spatial distribution patterns, and using worst-case impact calculation, the possibility of a measurable effect of disposal on year-class strength of blue crab and croaker could not entirely be ruled out. Therefore, a period of restricted dumping during peak recruitment of blue crab and croaker larvae (September - October) was recommended.

An Assessment of the Potential Impact of Dredged Material Disposal in the Open Ocean

An Assessment of the Potential Impact of Dredged Material Disposal in the Open Ocean
Author: Willis E. Pequegnat
Publisher:
Total Pages: 680
Release: 1978
Genre: Marine pollution
ISBN:

At the outset the report contains a discussion of several factors which indicate that deep ocean disposal of dredged material may need to be utilized much more extensively in the future than now. There follows a delineation and preliminary evaluation of the potential physical, chemical, and biological impacts that may occur from the disposal of dredged material in the deep ocean at and beyond the outer edge of the continental shelves of the United States and its possessions. A substantial part of the report is then devoted to the selection and description of oceanic areas (not sites) off eleven subdivisions or sectors of the U.S. coasts in which District Engineers or other Corps of Engineers officials may select specific disposal sites. The main body of the report is composed of two multipartite sections: Deep Ocean Disposal Perspectives, and Deep Ocean Disposal Environmental Considerations.