Aquaculture 2022

February 28 - March 4, 2022

San Diego, California

MEANS VERSUS MEDIANS: DOES IT MAKE A DIFFERENCE FOR AQUACULTURE REGULATORY COMPLIANCE OF BENTHIC SULFIDES?

 

Gregor K. Reid*, Danielle Dempsey, Leah Lewis-McCrea, Jessica Feindel

 

Centre for Marine Applied Research

 27 Parker St., COVE

 Dartmouth, NS, Canada , B2Y 4T5

greid@perennia.ca

 



Benthic sulfide concentration is a common proxy for dissolved oxygen . It is often used to classify benthic health as Oxic , Hypoxic, or Anoxic for regulatory compliance of marine finfish aquaculture. This s ite classification can dictate if mitigative action is required, such as changes in farm management practices or production levels.

Extensive variabilit y is common with environmental physicochemical metrics such as sulfides. A ccurate measurements  necessitate replicate sample collection to determine measures of central tendency (i.e. , mean or median). S cientific research  typically  aims to confirm or refute  a  hypothesis through inferential statistics based on an acceptable level of confidence. However, most regulatory environmental monitoring does not achieve  the  statistical power necessary for valid  inferential comparisons.  This is  often  because  determining  if  there is an i mpact  is not in question and measures are used to scale an effect . It could be that a small number of samples are collected in an exploratory nature with results used to trigger a larger sampling regimen, if needed.  It may also be that the ideal number of replicates is cost prohibitive or impractical to achieve. Sulfide measurements  for benthic classification arguably meet all these criteria, being notorious ly difficult to measure, highly variable, and expensive.  Consequently, descriptive statistical measures such as means are common sulfide reporting metrics applied for regulatory compliance of marine finfish aquaculture in many jurisdictions.  However, sulfide data distributions are  also often skewed. This begs the question: would sulfide medians be a more accurate measure  for regulatory compliance given the potential for skewness? If so, would medians favour  more  stringent or more lenient regulatory compliance?

In Nova Scotia, Canada, benthic sulfide data has been collected at marine finfish aquaculture sites annually since 2002 . In this jurisdiction, means are applied to replicates to determine sulfide values at individual sample locations , and the mean of sample locations are used to classify  farm site condition. A total of  193  historical sulfide site assessments were reanalyzed ,  applying medians to sample values and sample locations. A n R dashboard was  created  to enable ease of plot generation for individual years and sites, and  to  track changes in classification  upon the application of medians . If medians were applied to  only sample values alone , 3% of sites transitioned to a less impacted classification. If medians were applied to both sample values and sample locations, almost 10% of site classifications changed, with most transitioning to a  less impacted classification. Implications on environmental monitoring programs of finfish aquaculture are discussed in the context of traditional sulfide monitoring and new more accurate methods being proposed .