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NEWS: New Study Finds Artificial Reefs Can Enhance Fish Communities

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Scientists from NOAA National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science (NCCOS) and Southeast Fisheries Science Center (SEFSC) combined findings from various global, peer-reviewed publications that compared fish communities on artificial and natural reefs.

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Artificial reefs, which can be made from vessels, concrete pipes, and bridge pieces, are intentionally placed on the seafloor and can be effective tools for enhancing fish communities, but solutions are not “one size fits all”, a new NOAA study suggests.

Despite the overall conclusions that artificial and natural reefs perform similarly as fish habitat, the team discovered that artificial reefs in certain locations or composed of particular materials may perform better than others. “While we are not advocating for broad deployment of reef materials, our findings show that artificial reefs can benefit fish communities, however, location-specific siting and evaluations will be critical to their effectiveness” states Dr. Chris Taylor, a research ecologist at NCCOS and a co-author of the study.

The team’s findings support state and federal calls to enhance ocean habitats and fish communities through artificial reefs. “This publication benefits the North Carolina Artificial Reef Program by concisely expressing the ecological role of artificial reefs on a local and global scale” said Zach Harrison, an artificial reef biologist at North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries. “Not only does it show that artificial reefs function as an effective supplement to natural reefs, but it also supports the use of construction and management strategies tailored to the North Carolina coastal system” Harrison said.

“We hope that our findings will support decisions by state and federal managers to maximize the likelihood of artificial reef success, especially as related to NCCOS and NOAA’s mission to guide ocean stewardship in support of the Blue Economy.” concludes Taylor.

Read more fishing news here.

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