AI Article Synopsis

  • - Urban coastal habitats, like harbors and marinas, create new environments that change how organisms interact and adapt, leading to ecological impacts due to introduced species and modifications in water flow and contaminant spread.
  • - A study using reciprocal transplants among different marina sites found strong relationships between variations in contaminants (like metals and pesticides) and changes in the types of organisms present, indicating local adaptation to these conditions.
  • - Evidence from the research showed that species like Bugula neritina had different responses based on their original location, suggesting that marina conditions could favor the development of pollutant-resistant populations, emphasizing the need for more studies on local adaptation in these ecosystems.

Article Abstract

Urbanization of coastal habitats, of which harbors and marinas are the paragon, has led to various ecological paradigms about their functioning. Harbor infrastructures offer new hard substrata that are colonized by a wide variety of organisms (biofouling) including many introduced species. These structures also modify hydrodynamism and contaminant dispersal, leading to strong disturbance gradients within them. Differences in sessile community structure have previously been correlated to these gradients at small spatial scale (<100 m). Local adaptation might be involved to explain such results, but as correlation is not causation, the present study aims to understand the causal link between the environmental gradients and community structure through a reciprocal transplant experiment among three sites of a marina (inner, middle, entrance). Our results highlighted strong small-scale spatial variations of contaminants (trace metals, PCB, pesticides, and PAH) in sediments and animal samples which have been causally linked to changes in community composition after transplant. But historical contingency and colonization succession also play an important role. Our results provided strong evidence for local adaptation since community structure, respiration, and pollutant uptake in Bugula neritina, as well as the metabolomes of B. neritina and Ciona intestinalis were impacted by the transplant with a disadvantage for individuals transplanted from the entrance to the inner location. The here observed results may thus indicate that the disturbance gradient in marinas might constitute a staple for selecting pollutant-resistant species and populations, causing local adaptation. This highlights the importance of conducting further studies into small scale local adaptation.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.155911DOI Listing

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