Two years after the Prestige oil spill (POS) an assessment of the effects on benthic fauna was carried out using the data obtained in five multidisciplinary surveys. Otter trawl, beam trawl, suprabenthic sled and box corer were used to study the main benthic compartments, along eight transects perpendicular to the coastline. Beam trawl was also employed to quantify the amount of tar aggregates on the continental shelf. No significant correlations between tar aggregates and species richness, biomass and diversity of benthic communities were found. This result was corroborated when the role of depth, season, latitude and sediment characteristics was examined by canonical ordination, in which POS-related variables had low influence on spatial distribution patterns. Depth and sediment grain diameter profoundly influence epibenthic communities. Sediment organic content is a third key variable for the infaunal, suprabenthic and lower-sized epibenthic communities, but not for the larger epibenthic communities. Nevertheless, a decrease in the densities of several epibenthic indicators was detected the first year after spill, followed by a noteworthy recovery in 2004. Non-macroscopic toxicity and some oceanographic agents are suggested as possible causes of these shifts.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2005.09.030 | DOI Listing |
Biofouling
November 2024
Laboratoire Morphodynamique Continentale et Côtière, CNRS UMR 6143 M2C, Normandie Université, UNICAEN, Caen, France.
To inform the performance of ecological engineering designs for artificial structures at sea, it is essential to characterise their impacts on the epibenthic communities colonising them. In this context, the present study aims to compare the community structure among natural and four different artificial hard habitats with different ages and features installed in the Bay of Cherbourg (English Channel): ) cinder blocks and ) boulders, both installed six years prior to the study, and ) smooth and ) rugous concrete dykes, both installed one year prior to this study. Results showed that artificial habitats installed six years ago harboured communities with functional and taxonomic diversity characteristic of mature communities but were still different from those of natural habitat.
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October 2024
Laboratory of Plankton Biology, Department of Marine Biology and Biotechnology, University of Gdansk, Gdynia, Poland.
Benthic organisms typically possess a planktonic propagule stage in the form of larvae or spores, which enables them to spread over large distances before settlement, and promotes tight pelago-benthic coupling. However, factors driving dispersal and epibenthos recruitment in shallow hard-bottom Arctic communities are poorly known. We therefore conducted a year-round in situ colonization experiment in Isfjorden (Svalbard), and found out that variation in early-stage epibenthic assemblages was explained by the combination of: abiotic (45.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
August 2024
Eduardo Mondlane University, Faculty of Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences, Maputo, 1100, Mozambique.
In the transition from pelagic larva to benthic adult, larvae likely encounter a diverse assemblage of resident invertebrates in their habitat, which may also compete for space during post-settlement periods. Fouling fauna in rocky and seagrass habitats on Inhaca Island, southern Mozambique, was evaluated over 4 months in each of two seasons on oyster collectors fixed at 2 cm above the bottom. As expected, two species of oysters recruited to tiles: the rock oyster in rocky habitats and the pearl oyster, in seagrass habitats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Environ Res
September 2024
College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, South Australia, Australia.
Shellfish ecosystems facilitate important ecological functions and communities, but overexploitation and mismanagement have contributed to their decline worldwide. Within recent decades, coastal management efforts have increasingly sought to understand and reinstate valuable ecological functions provided by habitat-forming bivalves including oysters, mussels and pinnids. However, many bivalve species are critically understudied, limiting restoration and ecological engineering opportunities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
July 2024
Department of Ecological Chemistry, Alfred-Wegener Institut, Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar-und Meeresforschung, Bremerhaven, Germany.
Interactions between bacterial microbiota and epibenthic species of the dinoflagellate Prorocentrum may define the onset and persistence of benthic harmful algal blooms (bHABs). Chemical ecological interactions within the dinoflagellate phycosphere potentially involve a complex variety of organic molecules, metabolites, and toxins, including undefined bioactive compounds. In this study, the bacterial diversity and core members of the dinoflagellate-associated microbiota were defined from 11 strains of three epibenthic Prorocentrum species, representing three geographically disjunct locations within Mexican coastal waters.
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