Interacting effects of deposit feeding and tidal resuspension on benthic microalgal community structure and spatial patterns

Autor: Patricia B. Roth, Emily Frank, Craig J. Plante
Rok vydání: 2011
Předmět:
Zdroj: Marine Ecology Progress Series. 440:53-65
ISSN: 1616-1599
0171-8630
DOI: 10.3354/meps09326
Popis: Benthic microalgae (BMA) are important primary producers constituting an essential component of nearshore food webs. BMA also release extracellular polymeric secretions that sta- bilize sediments. Primary objectives of our research were to assess the separate and interactive effects of biotic and abiotic disturbances on structure and spatial patterns of microalgal communi- ties in shallow-water sediments. Using field comparative studies, we characterized the effects of 2 prominent types of disturbance: macroinvertebrate ingestion and tidal resuspension. BMA bio- mass and composition in fecal materials from the enteropneust Balanoglossus aurantiacus and sediments were followed through time using fluorometry and molecular techniques (PCR-DGGE analysis of 18S rDNA and sequencing). We also examined the effects of disturbance on spatial pat- terns of BMA biomass, diversity, and composition over the larger sedimentary landscape using correlative studies. Deposit-feeder ingestion was found to significantly reduce BMA biomass and alter BMA composition, although qualitative changes were comparatively less remarkable. A sig- nificant difference was also found between average biomass before and after tidal immersion. Spatial autocorrelation revealed heterogeneity in BMA distribution during low tide, and that this spatial patterning correlated with B. aurantiacus fecal coils. Samples taken after tidal immersion showed no patchiness, nor was there a correlation between BMA biomass and pre-immersion fecal cover. In intertidal sediments, the qualitative and quantitative impacts of deposit feeding, and the resulting landscape-scale patchiness, appear to be short-lived due to erasure by frequent tidal resuspension.
Databáze: OpenAIRE