scholarly journals Role of Holocene beds of the stout razor clam Tagelus plebeius in structuring present benthic communities

1999 ◽  
Vol 185 ◽  
pp. 213-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Gutiérrez ◽  
O Iribarne
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 134-150
Author(s):  
A.G. Dvoretsky ◽  

In 1960th, red king crab was intentionally introduced into the Barents Sea. This species has formed a new self-sustaining population. In Russian waters, the commercial fishery of red king crab was started in 2004. Non-indigenous status and high commercial value of the crab have led to growing interest in the study of its biology and ecology. Red king crab has been intensively studied by specialists of Murmansk Marine Biological Institute to evaluate the role of this crab in local benthic communities and provide a theoretic basis and important applications for fishery science. New data on the population dynamics, symbiotic relationships, feeding and reproduction of red king crab have been obtained from long-term studies in coastal waters of the Barents Sea. Significant results of these studies are presented in this review.


2007 ◽  
Vol 340 ◽  
pp. 55-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Kon ◽  
H Kurokura ◽  
K Hayashizaki

Author(s):  
M. Canessa ◽  
G. Bavestrello ◽  
E. Trainito ◽  
A. Navone ◽  
R. Cattaneo-Vietti

AbstractStructure and diversity of sessile zoobenthic assemblages seem to be driven not only by chemical-physical constraints and biological interactions but also by substrate lithology and its surface features. Nevertheless, broadly distributed crustose epilithic corallines could mask the role of substrate on animal settling. To evaluate the direct influence of different rocky substrates, occurrence and coverage of several sessile species, growing on the dark (i.e. coralline-free) face of sublittoral limestone and granite boulders were compared in the Tavolara MPA (Mediterranean Sea). The analysis of photographic samples demonstrated significant differences in terms of species composition and coverage, according to lithology. Moreover, limestone boulders were widely bare, while the cover per cent was almost total on granite. The leading cause of observed patterns could be the different level of dissolution of the two types of rocks, due to their different mineral composition and textural characteristics. Limestone has previously been shown to have higher dissolution compared with granite, and consequently, a more unstable surface. Our results suggest that, in dark habitats, the absence of the crustose coralline layer allows more rock dissolution and consequent lower stability of the limestone compared with granite, which, in turn, reduces the zoobenthos colonization.


2020 ◽  
Vol 84 (4) ◽  
pp. 463-475
Author(s):  
Josep-Maria Gili ◽  
Begoña Vendrell-Simón ◽  
Wolf Arntz ◽  
Francesc Sabater ◽  
Joandomènec Ros

Benthic communities depend on receiving much of their food from the water column. While sinking, particles are transformed in a discontinuous process and are temporally retained in transitional physical structures, which act as boundaries and contribute to their further transformation. Motile organisms are well-acquainted with boundaries. The number, width and placement of boundaries are related to the degree of particle degradation or transformation. Progressively deepening within each boundary, particles are degraded according to their residence time in the discontinuity and the activity of the organisms temporarily inhabiting that boundary. Finally, particles reach the seafloor and represent the main food source for benthic organisms; the quality and quantity of this food have a strong impact on the development of benthic communities. However, benthic communities not only play the role of a sink of matter: they act as an active boundary comparable to other oceanic boundaries, in accordance with the boundary concept proposed by the ecologist Ramon Margalef.


2006 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-86
Author(s):  
J.J. Zhang ◽  
X.Y. Li

Outfall discharge to seawater is generally used as a practical means of wastewater disposal in many coastal cities. However, deposition of solid pollutants from the wastewater on the seabed would affect the benthic communities. In the present study, both laboratory experiments and numerical simulations were carried out on the role of particle coagulation in the transport and sedimentation of sewage solid materials in marine waters after outfall discharge. Actual sewage samples were collected from two treatment plants in Hong Kong for the experimental study. A flocculator-imaging system was developed for characterization of the particle size distribution (PSD) dynamics during flocculation and dilution of sewage particles in seawater. The system consisted of an external flow-through cell, a microscopic CCD video recorder and an image analyzer. The laboratory results demonstrated that coagulation played an important role in regulating the transport of solid pollutants in marine waters. Flocculation of 30–45 min could shift the PSD considerably, transforming small particles to larger, fast-settling particle aggregates. With a growth in particle size by flocculation, the average settling velocity of the sewage particulates increased by a factor of 2 or more. In addition to the laboratory study, a mathematical model was developed to simulate the transport dynamic of wastewater particles in seawater after outfall discharge. The results of numerical simulations compared well with the experimental observations. Both laboratory and simulation results suggest the important role of coagulation in the transport and sedimentation dynamics of sewage particles in marine waters, especially in the early phase of outfall discharge. As a result, suspended solids from the wastewater discharge would deposit more closely in the vicinity of the outfall sites.


1975 ◽  
Vol 32 (9) ◽  
pp. 1657-1663 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric L. Mills

The contribution of benthic ecology to biological oceanography has been relatively slight, even though the benthos may be crucial in understanding the dynamics of marine ecosystems, as J. H. Steele’s model of the North Sea indicates. Before the benthos may be accurately assigned a role in such models, we need to know at least 1) what food items are consumed and assimilated, 2) what the role of bacteria and meiobenthos may be, and 3) if there are different levels of demersal fish production from differently structured benthic communities. There seem to be no shortcuts to the kind of information about benthic animals useful in permitting assessment of fisheries production in a realistic biological framework.


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