Abstract
More than 27 species of deep-sea corals have been identified off Atlantic Canada but their distributions are largely unknown. Bottom trawling is recognized as a threat to deep-sea corals in Atlantic Canada but the degree of damage has not been quantified. It is difficult to assess the level of conservation required for these organisms without basic information about their distribution. This study attempts to improve our knowledge of the distribution of deep-sea corals in Atlantic Canada.
The study uses three sources of data to map the distribution of deep-sea corals in Atlantic Canada including the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) groundfish trawl surveys from 1999–2001, DFO fisheries observer records from 2000 and 2001, and local ecological knowledge of fishermen in northern Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. The results reveal that deep-sea corals are widely distributed along the edge of the continental shelf from the Gulf of Maine to the Davis Strait. The study confirms the presence of eight species including: Acanella arbuscula, Acanthogorgia armata, Flabellum spp., Keratoisis ornata, Lophelia pertusa, Paragorgia arborea, Paramuricea spp. and Primnoa resedaeformis. Significant findings from the study include: documentation of an antipatharian, an order not previously recorded in Atlantic Canada; documentation of L. pertusa from the Stone Fence and reported locations from Jordan Basin and the Gully; and the extension of the known ranges of P. arborea, K. ornata, and Paramuricea spp. Relatively high abundances of P. resedaeformis and P. arborea are reported from the Northeast Channel off southwest Nova Scotia and east of Cape Chidley, Labrador. The highest coral species richness is found along the edge of the continental shelf between the Gully and the Laurentian Channel at the edge of the Scotian Shelf. Fishermen reported catching the largest specimens and highest numbers of corals from the Stone Fence and also identified the Gully as an area of high coral abundance. Several fishermen reported significant changes to the seafloor on the eastern Scotian Shelf and the Stone Fence over the duration of their fishing careers, including a decrease in the size and number of corals they caught.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Auld A (2002) We couldn’t believe our eyes: Scientists find reef building coral near Sable Island. September 25, 2002 edition. Halifax Herald Ltd. (Accessed at http://www.herald.ns.ca/stories/2002/09/25/f163.raw.html)
Auster PJ, Langton RW (1999) The effects of fishing on fish habitat. Amer Fish Soc Symp 22: 150–187
Babbie ER (1992) The Practice of Social Research. Wardsworth Publishing Company, Belmont, California
Breeze H, Davis DS, Butler M, Kostylev V (1997) Distribution and status of deep-sea corals off Nova Scotia. Marine Issue Comm Spec Publ 1. Ecology Action Centre, Halifax, NS
Brook G (1889) Report on the Antipatharia. Rep Sci Results Voyage Challenger. Zoology 32: 1–222
Collins JW (1884) On the occurrence of corals on the Grand Banks. Bull US Fish Comm, 237
Deichmann E (1936) The Alcyonaria of the western part of the Atlantic Ocean. Mem Mus Comp Zool 53. Cambridge US, Harvard College
DFO (1999) Teleost Trip No. 85, October 22–November 5, 1999. NAFO Division 2GH. Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Science, Oceans and Evironment Branch, St. John’s Newfoundland
DFO (2001) DFO NF — Fisheries Management-Observer Program. (Accessed at http://nfl.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/FM/cp/observers/)
DFO (2002) Backgrounder: Deep-sea coral research and conservation in offshore Nova Scotia. DFO Communications. (Accessed at http://www.mar.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/communications/maritimes/back02e/B-MAR-02-(5E).html)
Fischer J (2000) Participatory research in ecological fieldwork: a Nicaraguan study. In: Neis B, Felt L (eds) Finding our Sea Legs: Linking Fishery People and their Knowledge with Science and Management. Inst Soc Econ Res, Memorial University, St. John’s, Newfoundland, pp 41–54
Fosså JH, Mortensen PB, Furevik DM (2000) Lophelia coral reefs in Norway: distribution and effects of fishing. Inst Marine Res, Bergen, 94 pp
Fuller S, Cameron P (1998) Marine Benthic Seascapes: Fishermen’s perspective. Ecology Action Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, 64 pp
Gass S (2003) Conservation of deep-sea corals in Atlantic Canada. World Wildlife Fund Canada, Toronto, Ontario, 54 pp
Goode GB (1887) The fisheries and fishery industries of the United States. Section III: The fishing grounds of North America. US Comm Fish Fisheries Washington, 238 pp
Hecker B, Blechschmidt G, Gibson P (1980) Final report — Canyon assessment study in the Mid and North Atlantic areas of the U.S. outer continental shelf. US Dept Interior, Bureau Land Manage, Washington, DC
Hutchings JA (1996) Spatial and temporal variation in the density of Northern Cod and a review of hypotheses for the stock’s collapse. Canad J Fish Aquat Sci 53: 943–962
Hyman LH (1940) The Invertebrates: Protozoa through Ctenophora. McGraw-Hill, New York, 726 pp
International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) (2000) Effects of different types of fisheries on North Sea and Irish Sea benthic ecosystems: review of the IMPACT II Report. Int Council Explor Sea, Copenhagen, Denmark
Johannes RE (1981) Words of the Lagoon: fishing and marine lore in the Palau District of Micronesia. Univ California Press, Berkeley, California, 245 pp
Jones DP, Willison JHM (2001) The role of the Canadian Ocean Habitat Protection Society in deep-sea coral education and conservation advocacy in Nova Scotia. In: Willison JHM, Hall J, Gass SE, Kenchington ELR, Butler M, Doherty P (eds) Proceedings of the First International Symposium on Deep-sea Corals. Ecology Action Centre and Nova Scotia Museum, Halifax, NS, pp 166–174
Koslow JA, Gowlett-Holmes K (1998) The seamount fauna off southern Tasmania: benthic communities, their conservation and impacts of trawling. Final Rep Environ Australia Fish Res Dev Corp, Australia, 104 pp
Koslow JA, Gowlett-Holmes K, Lowry JK, O’Hara TO, Poore GC, Williams A (2001) Seamount benthic macrofauna off southern Tasmania: community structure and impacts of trawling. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 213: 11–125
Kramp PL (1932) The Godthaab expedition 1928 Alcyonaria, Antipatharia, and Madreporaria. Medd Gronland 79: 1–20
Krieger KJ (2001) Coral (Primnoa) impacted by fishing gear in the Gulf of Alaska. In: Willison JHM, Hall J, Gass SE, Kenchington ELR, Butler M, Doherty P (eds) Proceedings of the First International Symposium on Deep-sea Corals. Ecology Action Centre and Nova Scotia Museum, Halifax, NS, pp 106–116
Litvin VM, Rvachev VD (1963) The bottom topography and sediments of the Labrador and Newfoundland fishing areas. In: Marti YY (ed) United States Department of the Interior and the National Science Foundation (Translated from Russian)
Lutken C (1871) En ny sortkoral fra Polarhavet. Overs. K Danske Vidensk Slesk Forhandl 2: 18–26
MacIsaac K, Bourbonnais C, Kenchington E, Gordon D, Gass S (2001) Observations on the occurrence and habitat preference of corals in Atlantic Canada. In: Willison JHM, Hall J, Gass SE, Kenchington ELR, Butler M, Doherty P (eds) Proceedings of the First International Symposium on Deep-sea Corals. Ecology Action Centre and Nova Scotia Museum, Halifax, NS, pp 58–75
Mailhot J (1994) Traditional ecological knowledge: the diversity of knowledge systems and the study. Great Whale Environ Assess, Montreal, QC, 50 pp
Maurstad A (2000) Trapped in biology: an interdisciplinary attempt to integrate fish harvesters’ knowledge into Norwegian fisheries management. In: Neis B, Felt L (eds) Finding our Sea Legs: Linking Fishery People and their Knowledge with Science and Management. Inst Soc Econ Res, Memorial University, St. John’s, Newfoundland, pp 135–152
Miner RW (1950) Field Book of Seashore Life. G.P. Putnam’s Sons, New York
Mortensen PB, Buhl-Mortensen L, Gordon DC, Fader GBJ, McKeown DL, Fenton DG (2004) Effects of fisheries on deep-water gorgonian corals in the Northeast Channel, Nova Scotia (Canada). In: Thomas J, Barnes P (eds) Proceeding from the Symposium on the Effects of Fishing Activities on Benthic Habitats: Linking Geology, Biology, Socioeconomics and Management. Amer Fish Soc, November 12–14, 2002, Florida, USA
Mortensen PB, Buhl-Mortensen L (2004) Distribution of deep-water gorgonian corals in relation to benthic habitat features in the Northeast Channel (Atlantic Canada). Mar Biol 144: 1223–1238
Mortensen PB, Buhl-Mortensen L (2005) Deep-water corals and their habitats in The Gully, a submarine canyon off Atlantic Canada. In: Freiwald A, Roberts JM (eds) Cold-water Corals and Ecosystems. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg, pp 247–277
Mukhida A, Gass SE (2001) Corals of the Maritime Provinces of Canada: an illustrated guide. Unpubl Doc, School Resource Environ Stud, Dalhousie Univ, Halifax, NS
Neis B, Felt L (2000) Finding our Sea Legs: Linking Fishery People and their Knowledge with Science and Management. Inst Soc Econ Res, Memorial University, St. John’s, Newfoundland
Neis B, Sneider DC, Felt L, Haedrich RL, Fisher J, Hutchings JA (1999) Fisheries assessment: what can be learned from interviewing resource users? Canad J Fish Aquat Sci 56: 1949–1963
Opresko DM (1980) Taxonomic description of some deep-sea octocorals of the Mid and North Atlantic. In: Hecker BG, Blechschmidt G, Gibson P. (eds) Final report — Canyon Assessment Study in the Mid and North Atlantic areas of the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf. Appendix B. US Dept Interior, Bureau Land Manage, Washington, D.C.
Pax F (1932) Die Antipatharien und Madreporarien des arktischen Gebietes. Fauna Arctica 6: 267–280
Philippart CJM (1998) Long-term impacts of bottom fisheries on several by-catch species of demersal fish and benthic invertebrates. ICES J Mar Sci 55: 342–352
Probert PK, McKnight DG, Grove SL (1997) Benthic invertebrate bycatch from a deep-water trawl fishery, Chatham Rise, New Zealand. Aquat Conserv 7: 27–40
Sayfy A, Willison M, Sheppard V, Millar D (2003) Canada’s first ever coral reef discovered; conservation measures urgently needed. Newsl CPAW Nova Scotia Issue 3: 7
Tendal OS (1992) The North Atlantic distribution of the octocoral Paragorgia arborea (L., 1758) (Cnidaria, Anthozoa). Sarsia 77: 213–217
Verrill AE (1864) List of the polyps and corals sent by the Museum of Comparative Zoology to other institutions in exchange, with annotations. Bull Mus Comp Zoology 1: 29–60
Verrill AE (1878) Canadian Naturalist. Second Ser 8: 476. (Cited in Whiteaves JF Catalogue of the Marine Invertebrata of Eastern Canada. 32. S.E. Dawson, Ottawa.)
Verrill AE (1883) Results of the explorations made by the steamer “Albatross”, off the Northern Coast of the United States in 1883. US Comm Fish Fisheries, Comm Rep, 2, Appendix D, Nat Hist Biol Res
Verrill AE (1922) The Alcyonaria of the Canadian Arctic Expedition, 1913–1918, with a revision of some other Canadian genera and species. Rep Canad Arctic Exped 8, Mollusks, Echinoderms, Coelenterates, etc. Part G: Alcyonaria and Actinaria
Watling L, Norse EA (1998) Disturbance of the seabed by mobile fishing gear: a comparison to forest clearcutting. Conserv Biol 12: 1180–1197
Whiteaves JF (1901) Catalogue of the marine Invertebrata of Eastern Canada. Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa, 271 pp
Willison JHM, Hall J, Gass SE, Kenchington ELR, Butler M, Doherty P (2001) Proceedings of the First International Symposium on Deep-sea Corals. Ecology Action Centre and Nova Scotia Museum, Halifax, NS, 231 pp
Willison JHM, Jones DP, Atwood S (2002) Deep-sea corals and marine protected areas in Nova Scotia. In: Bondrup-Nielsen S, Munro NWP, Nelson G, Willison JHW, Herman TB, Eagles P (eds) Managing Protected Areas in a Changing World. SAMPAA, Wolfville, Canada, pp 1157–1163
Zibrowius H (1980) Les Scleractinaires de la Méditerranée et de l’Atlantique nord-oriental. Mem Inst Oceanogr Found Albert I, Prince de Monaco, 247 pp
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2005 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Gass, S.E., Willison, J.M. (2005). An assessment of the distribution of deep-sea corals in Atlantic Canada by using both scientific and local forms of knowledge. In: Freiwald, A., Roberts, J.M. (eds) Cold-Water Corals and Ecosystems. Erlangen Earth Conference Series. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-27673-4_11
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-27673-4_11
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-24136-2
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-27673-9
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)