Title of article
Ecosystem under pressure: Ballast water discharge into Galveston Bay, Texas (USA) from 2005 to 2010
Author/Authors
Steichen، نويسنده , , Jamie L. and Windham، نويسنده , , Rachel and Brinkmeyer، نويسنده , , Robin and Quigg، نويسنده , , Antonietta، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
11
From page
779
To page
789
Abstract
Ballast water exchange processes facilitate the dispersal and unnatural geographic expansion of phytoplankton, including harmful algal bloom species. From 2005 to 2010, over 45,000 vessels (∼8000 annually) travelled across Galveston Bay (Texas, USA) to the deep-water ports of Houston (10th largest in the world), Texas City and Galveston. These vessels (primarily tankers and bulkers) discharged ∼1.2 × 108 metric tons of ballast water; equivalent to ∼3.4% of the total volume of the Bay. Over half of the ballast water discharged had a coastwise origin, 96% being from US waters. Galveston Bay has fewer non-indigenous species but receives a higher volume of ballast water discharge, relative to the highly invaded Chesapeake and San Francisco Bays. Given the magnitude of shipping traffic, the role of Galveston Bay, both as a recipient and donor region of non-indigenous phytoplankton species is discussed here in terms of the invasibility risk to this system by way of ballast water.
Keywords
ballast water , Harmful algal blooms , Galveston Bay , Invasive species , phytoplankton
Journal title
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Record number
1985052
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