Soniat, T.M.Brody, M.S.Estuaries2010-02-152010-02-151988http://hdl.handle.net/1969.3/19137p. 87-95.A habitat suitability index (HSI) model, developed for the American oyster, Crassostrea virginica, along the Gulf of Mexico, was field tested on 38 0.1-ha reef and nonreef sites in Galveston Bay, Texas. The HSI depends upon six (HSI1) or, optionally, eight (HSI2) variables. The six variables are percent of bottom covered with suitable cultch (V sub(1)), mean summer water salinity (V sub (2)), mean abundance of living oysters (V sub (3)) (a gregarious settling factor), historic mean water salinity (V sub (4)), frequency of killing floods (V sub (5)), and substrate firmness (V sub (6)). The optional variables are the abundance of the southern oyster drill Thais haemostoma (V sub (7)), and the intensity of the oyster pathogen Perkinsus marinus (V sub (8)). The HSI values were lowest at high and low salinity sites and highest at intermediate-salinity sites.; TAMUG periodical collectionoystersoyster reefsAmerican oysterCrassostrea virginicahabitatmodelsmodelingsalinityabundancecultchfloodssubstratasouthern oyster drillthais haemostomaPerkinsus marinusField validation of a habitat suitability index model for the American oyster.Article