In coastal ecosystems, infaunal (animals living within the sediment) invertebrates are used to study and monitor disturbances. However, it is an open question as to the minimal required sampling intensity to detect that a disturbance has influenced such communities. As such, we implemented a manipulative experiment using an infaunal community with a known response (community composition and population abundances) to a mechanical disturbance (sediment scour), to determine the minimum sampling intensity required to detect differences in the infaunal community. Statistically significant differences (α = 0.05) between the infaunal community of the disturbed and reference replicates were observed in case studies consisting of 99 (4 samples per m) to 5 (0.2 samples per m) samples per treatment. Below 5 samples, the known statistical and biological difference was undetectable. However, at least 10 samples per treatment (0.4 samples per m) were required for the observed infaunal community to be within 93% similarity of our most accurate assessments of the infaunal community. These findings suggest that studies attempting to identify disturbances may require a minimal sampling intensity equivalent to 0.2 samples per m, while studies attempting to determine how the infaunal community varies with disturbances may require 0.4 samples per m. These potential minimal required sampling intensities will be of use in the theoretical exploration of disturbances, as well as in applied conservation, restoration, and monitoring projects.
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Sci Rep
December 2024
Marine Biology Laboratory, Earth and Life Institute, Université Catholique de Louvain, Croix du Sud 3, 1348, Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgium.
The bioluminescent European brittle star Amphiura filiformis produces blue light at the arm-spine level thanks to a biochemical reaction involving coelenterazine as substrate and a Renilla-like luciferase as an enzyme. This echinoderm light production depends on a trophic acquisition of the coelenterazine substrate. Without an exogenous supply of coelenterazine, this species loses its luminous capabilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
January 2025
Fukuyama-Hironaka Taxonomic and Environmental, 7019 157(th) Street S.W., Edmonds, WA 98026, USA.
Following the Exxon Valdez oil spill, hydraulic techniques using combinations of high-pressure and heated water were used to mobilize weathered oil from impacted shorelines. During treatment, concerns were raised over the ecological impacts of these treatment methods. We report on a long-term study comparing grain size and infaunal communities in washed and unwashed plots at unoiled beaches treated using these methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
December 2024
Applied Ecology Research Group, School of Life Sciences, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge CB1 1PT, United Kingdom.
Cigarette butts are amongst the most littered single-use plastics on coasts, yet their impacts on marine ecosystems, especially on a community level, are not well understood. Recently, e-cigarettes have become popular and are a novel litter item in marine habitats. Preliminary research indicates that e-liquid can harm individual organisms, but few studies have been done and none on a community level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
October 2024
School of Biosciences, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Mass extinctions are considered to be quintessential examples of Court Jester drivers of macroevolution, whereby abiotic pressures drive a suite of extinctions leading to huge ecosystem changes across geological timescales. Most research on mass extinctions ignores species interactions and community structure, limiting inference about which and why species go extinct, and how Red Queen processes that link speciation to extinction rates affect the subsequent recovery of biodiversity, structure and function. Here, we apply network reconstruction, secondary extinction modelling and community structure analysis to the Early Toarcian (Lower Jurassic; 183 Ma) Extinction Event and recovery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
December 2024
School of Earth and Environmental Sciences & Research Institute of Oceanography, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Republic of Korea.
Mangrove afforestation is usually thought to be beneficial to mitigate the degradation and loss of mangroves. In Southern China, planting mangroves with the introduced Sonneratia apetala is also supportive to remove the invasive Spartina alterniflora. However, the influence of mangrove afforestation dominated by introduced species on macrobenthos, a vital joint of energy flow and nutrient cycling in mangroves, remains unclear.
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