Litcius/Paper detail

Ballast Water Exchange Plus Treatment Lowers Species Invasion Rate in Freshwater Ecosystems

Johanna Bradie, David Drake, Dawson Ogilvie, Oscar Casas‐Monroy, Sarah A. Bailey

2020Environmental Science & Technology38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The movement of ballast water by commercial shipping is a prominent pathway for aquatic invasions. Ships' ballast water management is now transitioning from open ocean exchange to a ballast water performance standard that will effectively require use of onboard treatment systems. Neither strategy is perfect, therefore, combined use of ballast water exchange plus treatment has been suggested to provide greatest protection of aquatic ecosystems. This study compared the performance of exchange plus treatment against treatment alone by modeling establishment rates of nonindigenous zooplankton introduced by ballast water across different habitat types (fresh, brackish, and marine) in Canada. Treatment was modeled under two efficacy scenarios (100% and 50% of ship trips) to consider the possibility that treatment may not always be successful. The model results indicate that exchange plus treatment will be more effective than treatment alone at reducing establishments when recipient ports are freshwater (58 140 vs 11 338 trips until ≥1 establishment occurs, respectively). Exchange plus treatment also serves as an important backup strategy if treatment systems are partially effective (50% of trips), primarily for freshwater recipient ecosystems (1442 versus 585 trips until ≥1 establishment occurs, respectively).

Topics & Concepts

BallastFreshwater ecosystemEnvironmental scienceEcosystemEnvironmental chemistryEcologyChemistryBiologyMarine Ecology and Invasive SpeciesMarine Biology and Environmental ChemistryMarine Invertebrate Physiology and Ecology