期刊论文详细信息
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Biotic interactions influence sediment erodibility on wave-exposed sandflats
Rachel J. Harris1  Simon F. Thrush1  Andrew M. Lohrer1  Carl Van Colen1  Conrad A. Pilditch1  Judi E. Hewitt1  Michael Townsend1 
关键词: Deposit-feeding;    Microphytobenthos;    Benthic macrofauna;    Sediment stability;    Infauna;    Positive feedbacks;    Macomona liliana;    Habitat modifiers;   
DOI  :  10.3354/meps11164
学科分类:海洋学与技术
来源: Inter-Research
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【 摘 要 】

ABSTRACT: Biological activities in marine soft-sediments can modify the sedimentary environment through processes that change erosion rates. In low-energy environments, bioturbating macrofauna destabilizes sediments while microbes bind sediments and stabilize them. The degree to which these counter-acting processes influence sediment movement in a physically dynamic environment has not been well quantified. In a field experiment, we established 56 (1 m2) plots on an exposed intertidal sandflat. We used shade cloth and manipulated grazing pressure exerted by the deposit-feeding bivalve Macomona liliana (0-200 ind. m-2) to alter the microphytobenthic community. Three months post-manipulation, initiation of sediment transport (Ʈc) and change in sediment erosion rate with increasing bed shear stress (me) were measured. Mean grain size, density of the spionid polychaete Aonides trifida, density of adult M. liliana, and bulk carbohydrate concentration could account for 54% of the variation in Ʈc (0.3-1.1 N m-2 s-1). Mean grain size was the only significant predictor (p ≤ 0.01) of me explaining 22% of the variability (6-20 g N-1 s-1). Ʈc was negatively correlated with density of several abundant shallow-dwelling bioturbators (indicating sediment destabilization), but we did not observe the expected increase in Ʈc with microbial biomass. Furthermore, there was a positive correlation between adult M. liliana and Ʈc as well as evidence for several positive feedbacks between abundant shallow-dwelling macrofauna and microbial biomass. These study results demonstrate that despite frequent reworking by tidal currents and waves, bioturbating macrofauna are important to initiating sediment transport regardless of their effects on microbial biomass.

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