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Contacts:
Dr. JoAnn
Burkholder, 919/515-2726
Dr. David Eggleston,
919/515-7840
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470
June
14, 2004
Study:
Eastern N.C. Ecosystem Bounces Back From Hurricanes
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 |
Annual
commercial catch of bivalve molluscs (a), shrimp
(b), and finfish (c) in Pamlico Sound (filled
triangles) and the Neuse River Estuary (open triangles),
1994-2002 (N.C. Department of Environment and
Natural Resources data). |
After
receiving the brunt of powerful hurricanes in 1996 and
1999, the Neuse River and Estuary and western Pamlico
Sound in eastern North Carolina appear to have suffered
few long-term ill effects from the storms, and have
actually benefited ecologically in some ways from the
storms’ scouring effects.
Those
are the findings of a team of North Carolina State University
scientists and collaborators from various North Carolina
universities and government agencies.
Dr.
JoAnn Burkholder, NC State professor of botany and director
of the Center for Applied Aquatic Ecology, says the
research shows that water quality, numbers and health
of most of the area’s shellfish and finfish, and
the overall health of the surveyed water systems –
though initially acutely affected by storms, especially
Hurricane Fran in 1996 – have over the long run
returned to normal, suggesting the resilience of estuarine
systems such as the Neuse and Pamlico Sound. Some harmful
organisms that took hold before the storms are now in
abeyance, suggesting the storms beneficially flushed
the areas studied. The one major estuary dweller that
has been slow to recover is the blue crab, the researchers
say, although its numbers are now creeping back toward
average abundances.
The
research is published online this week (June 14) in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
(U.S.A.).
After
the storms, predictions abounded that Pamlico Sound,
of the Albemarle-Pamlico Estuarine System – the
largest lagoonal estuary in the United States –
would be devastated by the cumulative effects of Hurricane
Fran in 1996 and Hurricanes Dennis, Floyd and Irene
in 1999.
But
the longer-term data presented in this study show the
remarkable recovery and resilience of the water quality
and the finfish and shellfish inhabitants.
The
paper shows that although less water volume was delivered
by Hurricane Fran, large amounts of fish kills were
reported due to oxygen depletion and high concentrations
of contaminants like nitrogen, phosphorus and fecal
bacteria. After the 1999 hurricane season, however,
contaminant loads were about the same as in 1996, but
no major fish kills were reported due to the enormous
amount of flooding that diluted the pollution, Burkholder
says.
Diminished
levels of dissolved oxygen were documented after both
storms. But those levels returned to normal shortly
after the storms, the research shows.
Burkholder
added that the storms displaced undesirable organisms
– like the toxic alga Pfiesteria, linked
to massive fish kills in the 1990s – to areas
of the estuary that are less conducive for growth. Pfiesteria
populations have shown minimal recovery.
The
paper also states that commercial catch numbers of shrimp
or bivalve molluscs such as clams and scallops did not
suffer long-term effects from the storms.
The
one species affected negatively for a longer period
of time by the storms was the blue crab, the paper asserts.
Reductions in the number of blue crabs can be attributed,
says Dr. David Eggleston, professor of marine science
at NC State and co-author of the paper, to the relationship
between hurricane floodwaters, the crabs’ migration
response to the floodwaters and the subsequent overfishing
of the mass-migrating crabs.
“We
feel the historically low abundances of blue crabs in
2000 and 2001 are a direct result of the interactions
between floodwaters and overfishing,” Eggleston
said. “The blue crabs migrated en masse, which
concentrated them and made them more vulnerable to fishing.”
Another
piece of the puzzle involved the areas where the blue
crabs colonize, Eggleston says. Floodwaters from the
rivers impeded the movement of post-larval stages of
the blue crab from seawater inlets to their nursery
habitats along the western shore of Pamlico Sound.
Eggleston
says, though, that his new stock assessments of the
blue crabs will shed further light on its status in
Pamlico Sound.
“The
overall story we see is of estuarine resilience to impacts
from these types of major storms,” Burkholder
said. “The negative predictions about long-term
devastation of water quality and fisheries, made right
after the storms, were not borne out.”
Funding
for the study was provided by the Environmental Protection
Agency, the N.C. General Assembly, the National Science
Foundation and N.C. Sea Grant.
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kulowski -
Note
to editors: An abstract of the paper follows.
“Comparative
Impacts of Two Major Hurricane Seasons on the Neuse
River and Western Pamlico Sound Ecosystems”
Authors: JoAnn Burkholder, David Eggleston,
Howard Glasgow, Cavell Brownie, Robert Reed, Gerald
Janowitz, Greg Melia, Carol Kinder, Nora Deamer and
Jeffrey Springer, North Carolina State University; Martin
Posey and Troy Alphin, University of North Carolina-Wilmington;
Reide Corbett, East Carolina University; David Toms,
of NC State at the time of the study, now at the N.C.
Department of Environment and Natural Resources Division
of Water Quality
Published: The week of Monday, June 14, 2004,
in the online version of Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences (U.S.A.)
Abstract:
Ecosystem-level impacts of two hurricane seasons were
compared several years after the storms in the largest
lagoonal estuary in the United States, the Albemarle-Pamlico
Estuarine System. A segmented linear regression flow
model was developed to compare mass-water transport
and nutrient loadings to a major artery, the Neuse River
Estuary, and to estimate mean annual versus storm-related
volume delivery to the Neuse River Estuary and Pamlico
Sound. Significantly less water volume was delivered
by Hurricane Fran (1996), but massive fish kills occurred
in association with severe dissolved oxygen deficits
and high containment loadings (total inorganic nitrogen,
total phosphorus, suspended solids, fecal bacteria).
The high water volume of the second hurricane season
(Hurricanes Dennis, Floyd, Irene in 1999) delivered
generally comparable but more dilute contaminant loads,
and no major fish kills were reported. There were no
discernable long-term adverse impacts on water quality.
Populations of undesirable organisms such as toxic dinoflagellates
were displaced down-estuary to habitats less conducive
for growth. The response of fisheries was species-dependent:
There was no apparent impact of the hurricanes on commercial
landings of bivalve molluscs or shrimp. In contrast,
interacting effects of hurricane floodwaters in 1999
and intensive fishing pressure led to striking reductions
in blue crabs. Overall, the data support the premise
that in shallow estuaries frequently disturbed by hurricanes,
there can be rapid recovery in water quality and biota,
and benefit from the scouring activity of these storms.
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