Decadal changes in the benthic invertebrate community in western Lake Erie between 1981 and 2004

Autor: Frederick M. Soster, Peter L. McCall, Keith A. Herrmann
Rok vydání: 2011
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Great Lakes Research. 37:226-237
ISSN: 0380-1330
DOI: 10.1016/j.jglr.2011.03.005
Popis: Faunal surveys of western Lake Erie showed a dramatic change in the species composition and abundance of the invertebrate mud-bottom community. Abundances of formerly dominant ostracods, tubificid and naidid oligochaetes, and chironomids declined 85%, 87%, 80%, and 72%, respectively, between 1982 and 2003. The majority of the declines occurred between 1982 and 1993, when dreissenid abundances were increasing rapidly. Hexagenia nymphs became important members of the infaunal community after 1993. Faunal declines were uncorrelated to weather-related variables. The frequency and magnitude of thermal stratification with accompanying hypoxic conditions during the study period remained within the normal range of variation observed in western Lake Erie. Significant wind events and storm driven seiches that might cause benthos mortality were not correlated with the decadal patterns of faunal decline. Nor were the faunal declines associated with the historical decrease in organic loading, because most of the decrease occurred prior to the study period. Nearly all abundant species declined significantly between 1982 and 1993, but deposit-feeding fauna, eutrophic indicator species, small organisms, and nearshore mud-bottom stations adjacent to dreissenid mussel habitat were most severely affected. These patterns suggest that a systemic change in the trophic structure of western Lake Erie occurred, due mostly to the invasion of dreissenid mussels nearshore and an accompanying diversion of organic matter away from deeper offshore muds. Trophic group amensalism may operate differently in marine and freshwater habitats, although dreissenids may exert ecosystem effects in the Great Lakes similar to oysters in Chesapeake Bay.
Databáze: OpenAIRE