Potential Impacts of Sand Mining Offshore of Maryland and Delaware: Part 2—Biological Considerations

2004 
Abstract The mining of sand resources from the inner continental shelf for beach nourishment may lead to impacts or increase stress on commercial and noncommercial living resources that utilize these areas. The objective of our work was to characterize benthos present in areas likely to be mined and to predict impacts of sand mining. In 1998 and 1999 we used a combination of methods (grab samples, sediment profile cameras, video sled, and trawl) to collect data on the benthos, both fishes and invertebrates, which utilized several potential sand mining areas. We found benthic communities and fish assemblages to be typical of middle Atlantic sandy inner continental shelf habitats. A sand mining scenario that removed the top meter of sand from Fenwick Shoal would disturb approximately 7.7 km2 with the potential acute impact on noncommercial sessile species being the loss of about 150 × 106 individuals representing 300 kg of wet weight biomass that could have functioned as trophic support to fishes. In additi...
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