Mirta Zupan, Joop Coolen, Ninon Mavraki, Steven Degraer, Tom Moens, Francis Kerckhof, Lucia Lopez Lopez, and Jan Vanaverbeke (2024)
Life on every stone: Characterizing benthic communities from scour protection layers of offshore wind farms in the southern North Sea
Journal of Sea Research, 201(102522):1-13.
The scour protection layer (SPL) is a layer of large stones placed around man-made structures in the marine
environment, preventing sediment scouring while also providing new hard substrate and potentially increasing
the structural complexity of the original environment. This fosters development of diverse benthic communities,
supporting high abundance of organisms. Future SPLs are therefore a potential tool for the ecological
enhancement of degrading marine habitats following the principles of nature-inclusive design. Yet, factors that
shape the benthic communities on SPLs are poorly understood. Here, we analysed existing data from SPLs from
offshore wind farms and a gas platform in the southern North Sea to determine how SPL characteristics affect the
biofouling community structure. We combined this analysis with an in-situ experiment testing for the effects of
habitat complexity on SPL communities. Our results demonstrate that abundant and diverse communities are
present on all SPLs. On a regional scale, communities are mainly affected by depth and location. Increasing
habitat complexity has significant and positive effects on species richness yet was non-significant for biomass and
abundance of the biofouling community. If applied thoughtfully, nature-inclusive design of the SPL habitat,
including manipulation of the physical complexity of the structure, can effectively promote biodiversity.
Scour protection, Biofouling, Artificial reefs, Nature inclusive design, Habitat complexity, Benthos
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