Land-Use Changes: 1998
Publications
Author: Engel,
D.W. and Thayer, G.W.
Title: Effects of habitat alteration on blue
crabs.
Publication: Journal of Shellfish Research
17(2): 579-585, 1998.
© National Shellfisheries Association
Notes: Blue crabs,
Callinectes sapidus, are an estuarine and coastal species
subject to a wide range of environmental conditions. Their
survival, growth, reproduction, and abundance are influenced by
both natural processes and events and by human activities. How
such activities might affect the survival and abundance of blue
crabs is the focus of this discussion. Because the life cycles and
growth of blue crabs and other crustaceans are relatively complex,
they are vulnerable to chemical and physical alterations to their
habitat in different ways during their life. Not only are insults
to the different life stages important, but negative impacts to
the food webs that support them may also be damaging. When dealing
with human-induced alterations to the environment, we often become
preoccupied with the introduction of toxic chemicals and
pesticides and their effects on individual organisms, and overlook
less emotionally charged but more widespread threats, such as
nutrient loading, alterations of freshwater inflow, and physical
destruction of estuarine and coastal habitat. Increasing human
population densities and development near the Atlantic and Gulf of
Mexico coasts may pose the greatest threat to blue crab
populations through alterations of upland watersheds with
increased runoff, erosion, and turbidity, and increased
nonpoint-source runoff of chemicals and nutrients. Unless these
activities are adequately controlled, the degradation of coastal
habitat necessary for the survival and growth of blue crab
populations will grow.
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