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Barging in: A Temperate Marine Community Travels to the Subantarctic
Authors:Patrick N Lewis  Dana M Bergstrom  Jennie Whinam
Institution:(1) Institute of Antarctic and Southern Ocean Studies, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 77, Hobart, 7001, Australia;(2) Australian Antarctic Division, Channel Highway, Kingston, 7050, Australia;(3) Department of Primary Industry, Water and Environment, Nature Conservation Branch, GPO Box 44, Hobart, 7001, Australia
Abstract:A diverse fouling community discovered encrusting a barge intended for deployment at subantarctic Macquarie Island is described and its role as a transport vector for non-indigenous marine organisms is discussed. The barge proved to be a potential vector capable of transporting entire epi-bethic communities, 20 species in total, from a temperate estuarine system (Derwent River, Tasmania, Australia) into the subantarctic. For one invasive amphipod species Monocorophium acherusicum, over 136000 individuals including ovigerous females were calculated to be associated with the barge fouling community. Although distinct differences exist between the thermal ranges of Macquarie Island and the Bruny bioregion of Tasmania, a hazard assessment based on the Gower similarity coefficient suggested sufficient similarity between the two environments to allow for survival of transported organisms for eight months of the year. Several invasive species are able to survive the thermal conditions of the subantarctic irrespective of the time of year. This study identifies the need for effective quarantine measures aimed at identifying and managing marine biosecurity hazards in association with human activities in high latitude regions.
Keywords:fouling  invasive  Macquarie Island  marine  non-indigenous  quarantine  subantarctic
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