Increasing ocean temperatures and sea level rise occurring from climate change will affect worldwide coastal fisheries, oyster-based ecosystems and aquaculture. Models predict that average surface temperature of the Earth could increase 1.8- 4.0°C by 2100. Organisms that are currently near temperature thresholds are likely to suffer increasing mortality. Shellfish growers across Florida, USA have experienced losses of market-size clams when summer water temperatures exceed 32°C, especially on the Gulf of Mexico coast where temperatures have increased by 0.3 to 2.0°C in the past 20-30 yrs. In light of recurring summer mortality events, as well as increasing ocean temperatures, it is clear that the Florida clam aquaculture industry needs a heat-tolerant clam strain to reduce summer mortalities, adapt to future climate change, and continue to contribute to global food security.
Member of
Contributors
Publisher
Institute of Aquaculture, University of Stirling
Date Issued
2011
Note
Language
Type
Genre
Extent
4 p.
Subject (Topical)
Identifier
3352219
Additional Information
Increasing ocean temperatures and sea level rise occurring from climate change will affect worldwide coastal fisheries, oyster-based ecosystems and aquaculture. Models predict that average surface temperature of the Earth could increase 1.8- 4.0°C by 2100. Organisms that are currently near temperature thresholds are likely to suffer increasing mortality. Shellfish growers across Florida, USA have experienced losses of market-size clams when summer water temperatures exceed 32°C, especially on the Gulf of Mexico coast where temperatures have increased by 0.3 to 2.0°C in the past 20-30 yrs. In light of recurring summer mortality events, as well as increasing ocean temperatures, it is clear that the Florida clam aquaculture industry needs a heat-tolerant clam strain to reduce summer mortalities, adapt to future climate change, and continue to contribute to global food security.
This abstract may be cited as: Scarpa, J., Baker, S. M., & Sturmer, L. N. (2011). Evaluation of thermally selected multi-parental crosses with Mercenaria mercenaria and M. mercenaria x M. campechiensis clam hybrids to improve hard clam crop production in Florida. 14th International Conference on Shellfish Restoration, 23-27 August, 2011, Stirling, Scotland, UK.
Florida Atlantic University. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute contribution #1842.
Date Backup
2011
Date Text
2011
Date Issued (EDTF)
2011
Extension
FAU
FAU
admin_unit="FAU01", ingest_id="ing13612", creator="creator:BCHANG", creation_date="2012-08-30 17:02:33", modified_by="super:FAUDIG", modification_date="2014-02-19 08:38:29"
IID
FADT3352219
Issuance
single unit
Person Preferred Name
Scarpa, John
creator
jscarpa1@fau.edu
Physical Description
4 p.
Title Plain
Preparing Florida hard clam, Mercenaria mercenaria, culture for climate change
Origin Information
Institute of Aquaculture, University of Stirling
2011
single unit
Title
Preparing Florida hard clam, Mercenaria mercenaria, culture for climate change
Other Title Info
Preparing Florida hard clam, Mercenaria mercenaria, culture for climate change