The Northland Age

Scientists chase source of mussels

Spat believed to come from Ninety Mile Beach reefs

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The mussels fuelling Aotearoa’s lucrative aquacultur­e industry come from reefs located around Te Oneroaa-Tōhe/Ninety Mile Beach. That’s according to Moana Project scientists who have just released their findings after three years of research.

Dr Romain Chaput, a postdoctor­al fellow with Victoria University who conducted parts of the research said: “New Zealand’s green-lipped mussel aquacultur­e industry is worth $380 million annually. The industry is largely reliant on wild-caught baby mussels, known as spat, that wash up attached to seaweed on Te Oneroa-a-Tōhe / Ninety Mile Beach.

“Until now, we had not identified the source of the spat, and that posed a threat to the aquacultur­e industry that depends on it.”

Moana Science lead oceanograp­her Dr Joao de Souza from MetOcean Solutions added, “Knowing the source of spat is important — knowing where the mussel beds are, agencies can work with hapū and iwi to establish a regime of protection that will benefit everybody.”

Dr Chaput said, “Mussels

Knowing the source of spat is important —

knowing where the mussel beds are, agencies can work with hapu¯ and iwi to establish a regime of protection that will

benefit everybody. Oceanograp­her Dr Joao de Souza, Moana Science lead

spend up to six weeks as larvae, which means that they can be transporte­d hundreds of kilometres before they land on the beach. In the Moana Project, we used ocean modelling

and genetic analysis to figure out the source of the spat that lands on Te Oneroaa-Tōhe / Ninety Mile Beach.

“Mussel genetics demonstrat­e that the spat landing on Ninety Mile Beach are from nearby reefs. The spat from the local area are similar geneticall­y, but distinctly different from mussels from other parts of Aotearoa.”

Dr Chaput said this is supported by the ocean modelling carried out by the

Moana Project.

“By tracking particles in ocean hydrodynam­ic models, we found that the spat landing on Te Oneroa-a-Tō he / Ninety Mile Beach is most likely to come from mussel reefs off Ahipara and to a lesser extent from Tiriparepa / Scott Point and Hokianga.

“The research shows that although mussel larvae can theoretica­lly be transporte­d hundreds of kilometres at sea during their month-long

journey, we now know that off the west coast of Northland they are not transporte­d very far at all — the spat come from local mussel beds.”

Kevin Oldham, the chairman of the Marine Farming Associatio­n R&D Committee, said, “Knowing the location of the mussel beds that the aquacultur­e industry relies on for spat allows resource managers and communitie­s to safeguard them for future generation­s.”

 ?? ?? Most green-lipped mussels in New Zealand’s aquacultur­e farms come from spat that wash up on Ninety Mile Beach.
Most green-lipped mussels in New Zealand’s aquacultur­e farms come from spat that wash up on Ninety Mile Beach.
 ?? ?? The spat landing on Te Oneroa-a-To¯ he / Ninety Mile Beach is most likely to come from mussel reefs off Ahipara and to a lesser extent from Tiriparepa / Scott Point and Hokianga.
The spat landing on Te Oneroa-a-To¯ he / Ninety Mile Beach is most likely to come from mussel reefs off Ahipara and to a lesser extent from Tiriparepa / Scott Point and Hokianga.

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