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-List Of Titles -Impacts of detrital enrichment on estuarine assemblages : disentangling effects of frequency and intensity of disturbance

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/180249

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Title
Impacts of detrital enrichment on estuarine assemblages : disentangling effects of frequency and intensity of disturbance
Related
Marine ecology progress series, Vol. 341, No. -, (2007), p.25-36
DOI
10.3354/meps341025
Publisher
Inter-Research
Date
2007
FoR/RFCD Code(s)
060200 Ecology
Author/Creator
Bishop, Melanie J
Author/Creator
Kelaher, Brendan P
Description
Under climate change, enhanced storminess may increase the magnitude and rate of detrital loading to the benthos, potentially altering sediment chemistry and/or physical disturbance of sediments. To assess whether the impact of detrital loading on invertebrates in intertidal sediment sparsely vegetated by seagrass is negatively affected by increasing the frequency and/or intensity of the disturbance, high (90 g dry weight) or low (30 g dry weight) quantities of shredded Zostera capricornii were added to experimental plots at high (intervals of 8 wk, on a total of 3 occasions) or low (added once) frequency. Macroinvertebrate assemblages were sampled 8, 16 and 24 wk after the first detrital enrichment. Plots subjected to frequent detrital addition contained up to 50% fewer macroinvertebrates, representing 50% fewer taxa than plots disturbed only once. This pattern was independent of disturbance intensity and emerged after only 2 detrital additions. Only at the low frequency of addition did the increased quantity of detritus influence macroinvertebrate assemblage composition, halving the number of animals by Week 24. Physical disturbance, not sediment chemistry, drove the frequency effect. Generally negative impacts of frequent detrital enrichment on infaunal populations occurred despite small positive effects of high detrital enrichment on the biomass of microphytobenthos, the food source of many sediment-dwelling invertebrates. These results suggest that, even though climate warming may increase the amount of detritus that is washed up onto intertidal sediments, its greater effect on soft-sediment communities is likely to come through increasing the frequency of storms.
Description
12 page(s)
Subject Keyword
060200 Ecology
Subject Keyword
Detrital enrichment
Subject Keyword
Frequency
Subject Keyword
Intensity
Subject Keyword
Macroinvertebrate
Subject Keyword
Zostera capricornii
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Biological Sciences

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/180249
Identifier
ISSN:0171-8630
Identifier
mq-rm-2008001563
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Marine ecology progress series"
 
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