Factors regulating benthic food chains in tropical river deltas and adjacent shelf areas

1995 ◽  
Vol 15 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 145-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Alongi ◽  
A. I. Robertson
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaetano Porcile ◽  
Michele Bolla Pittaluga ◽  
Alessandro Frascati ◽  
Octavio Sequeiros

<p>When narrow continental shelves are stressed by extreme weather events, nearshore currents dominate the coastal circulation leading to complex flow patterns that can result in previously unforeseen cross-shelf exchange of water and sediment. Here we present a series of detailed studies carried out to investigate the nature of turbidity currents that impacted upon a submarine pipeline offshore Philippines, nearby tropical river deltas, after the landfall of intense typhoons. These rivers debouch into a shelf only a few hundreds of meters wide that is interrupted by steeper continental slopes carved by multiple submarine canyons. Turbidity currents were detected through regular pipeline monitoring, which showed lateral displacements and sea-floor erosion where the pipeline crosses some of these canyons. Seabed assessments indicated signatures of the occurrence of turbidity currents as opposed to landslides or ground motion due to earthquakes. Particularly, the submarine canyons were covered with regular sediment patterns that indicated the passage of deep-water turbulent flows, suggesting the local occurrence of turbidity currents. Meteorological data pointed at river floods and meteocean conditions, and associated fluvial sediment delivery and coastal sediment transport, as the most likely leading mechanisms for the triggering of turbidity currents. Hydrological modelling and related sediment transport calculations show these rivers were not capable to debouch into the sea with sediment concentrations high enough to generate hyperpycnal flows. Nevertheless, river plumes played an active role as source of sediment available on the shelf. Conversely, the role of the coastal circulation was found to be crucial for the triggering of turbidity currents. Our simulations show the development of exceptional rip currents (megarips) that flush out water and sediment from the inner shelf in the cross-shore direction towards the canyons’ heads, ultimately triggering turbidity currents into deep ocean waters. Such extreme nearshore circulations require the passage of intense typhoons in proximity to the trigger area inducing shore-normal incoming waves at peak conditions that in association with shoreline concavity at the river deltas favour the formation of erosional megarips, whose dynamics strongly depends on typhoon's approach latitude. The turbidity current modelling confirmed such an interpretation, matching field observations in the form of pipeline displacements. These evidences support our hypothesis that typhoon-induced megarip circulations could be responsible for the triggering of turbidity currents in submarine canyon systems offshore tropical river deltas. This newly identified mechanism has wide implications on the threatening of seafloor infrastructures and the assessment of frequency and duration of turbidity currents.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaetano Porcile ◽  
Michele Bolla Pittaluga ◽  
Alessandro Frascati ◽  
Octavio E. Sequeiros

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Granberg ◽  
Lisa Winberg von Friesen ◽  
Amalie Ask ◽  
France Collard ◽  
Kerstin Magnusson ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1973 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 787-797 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Ware

A model is developed to describe the risk of aquatic prey to visual predators in general, and is evaluated with particular reference to rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri). The equation system uses several principles of visual mechanics to determine predation rates and therefore requires statistics on the physical properties of the food resource, besides the visual acuity and other searching constraints of the predator.Application of the model to an independent set of field data accounted for 47% of the seasonal variation in the occurrence of four benthic invertebrate prey in the diet of trout from Marion Lake, B.C. Considerably better agreement — 70% of the variation — was obtained using a three prey system. Sequential comparisons between the predicted and observed pattern of predation suggest that prey activity, prey exposure, prey density, and prey size are four of the major determinants of prey risk in benthic food chains.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan F. Paniagua-Arroyave ◽  
Jaap H. Nienhuis ◽  
Frances E. Dunn

<p>Riverine sediment yield changes by human-induced catchment alterations can have important implications for river delta morphology. Here, we assess the potential response of 99 tropical deltas along the Caribbean and Pacific coasts of Colombia to projected human land use intensifications by deforestation and river damming. We assess delta morphology through the balance of wave, tidal, and (modern and future) river sediment transport processes at their mouths. We find that most Colombian deltas along the Caribbean coast are wave-dominated, except for large catchments with high riverine sediment load, which are river-dominated. Most deltas are wave-river dominated along the Pacific coast, with few examples of river-tide and wave-tide dominance. We predict Colombian deltas to become more wave and tide-dominated under river damming scenarios. In contrast, deforestation scenarios suggested virtually no future morphological changes.</p>


Author(s):  
Warwick F. Vincent

‘Food chains to fish’ considers the nature of pelagic and benthic food webs and the coupling between them. Life at the bottom of lakes in the benthic zone is mostly made up of worms, molluscs, and amphipods. In the open lake waters, three groups of zooplankton play a leading role in the transfer of carbon and energy from the base of the food web (phytoplankton and bacteria) to pelagic fish: rotifers, cladocerans, and copepods. Although certain fish species remain within specific zones of the lake, others swim between zones and access multiple habitats. The tracking of elements through the food chain can help understand the impacts of chemical pollution.


Author(s):  
Judith A. Murphy ◽  
Anthony Paparo ◽  
Richard Sparks

Fingernail clams (Muscu1ium transversum) are dominant bottom-dwelling animals in some waters of the midwest U.S. These organisms are key links in food chains leading from nutrients in water and mud to fish and ducks which are utilized by man. In the mid-1950’s, fingernail clams disappeared from a 100-mile section of the Illinois R., a tributary of the Mississippi R. Some factor(s) in the river and/or sediment currently prevent clams from recolonizing areas where they were formerly abundant. Recently, clams developed shell deformities and died without reproducing. The greatest mortality and highest incidence of shell deformities appeared in test chambers containing the highest proportion of river water to well water. The molluscan shell consists of CaCO3, and the tissue concerned in its secretion is the mantle. The source of the carbonate is probably from metabolic CO2 and the maintenance of ionized Ca concentration in the mantle is controlled by carbonic anhydrase. The Ca is stored in extracellular concentric spherical granules(0.6-5.5μm) which represent a large amount of inertCa in the mantle. The purpose of this investigation was to examine the role of raw river water and well water on shell formation in the fingernail clam.


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