Volume 55

The Role of Oil and Gas Platforms in Providing Habitat for Northem Golf of Mexico Red Snapper, Lutjanus campechanus


Authors
Wilson, C.A.; Nieland, D.L.
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Date: 2004


Pages: 757-764


Event: Proceedings of the Fifty Fifth Annual Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute


City: Xel Ha


Country: Mexico

Abstract

The northern Gulf of Mexico (GOM) off Louisiana and Texas currently produces significant portions of the commercial and recreational harvests of red snapper Lutjanus campechanus; however, this has not always been the case. Annual commercial landings in the five states bordering the GOM indicate a shift in the fishery from the eastern to the more westem GOM since 1970 concomitant with the placement of several thousand oil and gas platforms into the area. Although the addition of considerable complex steel structure to the environment and theshift of the red snapper fishery to Louisiana and Texas may be coincidental, there is still a need to better understand the role of oil and gas platforms in red snapper life history.\Quantitative estimates of red snapper associated with platforms have been derived both from assessments of the effects of platform removal via explosives and from hydroacoustic surveys of selected platforms. Based both on these estimates and on the numbers of platforms sited at depth, we estimate from 1.2 to 7.2 million red snapper live around platforms placed at depths of 20 - 100 m. Many of these are relatively young individuals of ages 2 - 4 years. These numbers suggest a range of red snapper abundances reflecting the ubiquitous presence of red snapperat oil and gas platforms. We intend to continue this line of investigatión to determine if platforms have become "essential" to the persistence of a large population of red snapper in the northem GOM.

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