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1.
Mar Environ Res ; 149: 148-156, 2019 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31200954

RESUMO

Polychaetes play a key role in benthic functioning and organic matter recirculation. We performed a meta-analysis to investigate the effects of organic matter on polychaetes, considering its origin, type and measurement along the east coast of South America. We summarize 276 effect sizes, mostly representing the Tropical Southwestern Atlantic and Warm Temperate Southwestern Atlantic provinces. We observed that the effect of organic matter depends on its origin and type. We also reveal that the predominance of tolerant species of Capitellidae, Nereididae and Spionidae explains the great variability in effect sizes and non-significant effects. Organic matter negatively affected assessment of polychaete assemblages, such as aspects of diversity and trophic groups. This result suggests that the impact of organic matter can be more intense for communities than for individual species. We suggest that researchers should investigate more complex ecological scales to understand the overall effect of organic matter on polychaetes.


Assuntos
Monitoramento Ambiental , Eutrofização , Poliquetos/classificação , Poluição da Água , Animais , Biodiversidade , Biota , Cidades , Estuários , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Água do Mar/química , América do Sul
2.
R Soc Open Sci ; 1(3): 140294, 2014 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26064564

RESUMO

The deep West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) shelf is characterized by intense deposition of phytodetritus during spring/summer months, while very little food material reaches the seafloor during winter. The response of the shelf benthic megafauna to this highly variable food supply is still poorly understood. In order to characterize the deposition of phytodetritus and the megabenthic community response, we deployed a seafloor time-lapse camera at approximately 590 m depth on the mid WAP shelf west of Anvers Island for 15 months. Seafloor photographs were taken at intervals of 12 or 24 h nearly continuously from 9 December 1999 (austral winter) to 20 March 2001 (summer) and analysed for phytodetritus deposition and megafaunal dynamics. Seafloor images indicated a marked seasonal arrival of greenish phytodetritus, with large interannual and seasonal variability in the coverage of depositing phytodetrital particles. The surface-deposit-feeding elasipod holothurians Protelpidia murrayi and Peniagone vignoni dominated the epibenthic megafauna throughout the year, frequently constituting more than 80% of the megafaunal abundance, attaining total densities of up to 2.4 individuals m(-2). Elasipod abundances were significantly higher in summer than winter. During summer periods of high phytodetrital flux, Pr. murrayi produced faecal casts at higher rates, indicating intensified population-level feeding activity. In March-June 2000, faecal casts lasted longest, suggesting lower horizontal bioturbation activity during autumn-winter. Our data indicate that the Pr. murrayi population increases its feeding rates in response to increasing amounts and/or lability of organic matter on the sediment surface. Assuming that this species feeds on the top millimetre of the sediment, we estimate that, during periods of high phytodetrital flux, the Pr. murrayi population reworks one square metre of sediment surface in approximately 287 days. We suggest that Pr. murrayi is an important species for organic-carbon recycling on the deep WAP shelf, controlling the availability of deposited labile phytodetritus to the broader shelf benthic community.

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