RESUMO
Damming has been reported to give many short-term benefits for local people but also to result in long-term negative impacts on the aquatic ecosystem. The ecological impact of the Ba Lai dam was studied by investigating environmental differences and the response of associated aquatic nematode communities (structure and morphometric characteristics) in both downstream and upstream sections of its estuary in comparison to an adjacent dam-free estuary Ham Luong, both belonging to the Mekong delta in Vietnam. Depleted dissolved oxygen, elevated methane and sulfide concentrations and increased accumulation of contaminants, including total suspended solid, heavy metals, and nutrients in the dammed estuary and its upstream section, indicated an impact of the dam on the environment. The dammed estuary showed differences in the nematode communities inhabiting the subtidal sediments from the reference estuary such as a higher nematode individual biomass with smaller length/width ratio as a consequence of the larger body width. The absence of long/thin nematodes in the dammed estuary, but high abundance of a slender nematode morphotype, a group with a higher efficiency of obtaining dissolved oxygen as a consequence of their comparatively large surface/volume ratio, might represent an adaptation of those communities to live in poor oxygen condition. In the dammed estuary, the small L/W ratio of nematode communities was potentially driven by the interaction effects of enrichment of both total suspended solid and ammonium linked to dissolved oxygen depletion. These findings support the potential use of nematode communities as bioindicators in ecological quality assessment although plausible; it is not possible to ascertain if only the dam causes the changes in the nematode communities.
Assuntos
Nematoides , Poluentes Químicos da Água , Animais , Humanos , Estuários , Ecossistema , Vietnã , Monitoramento Ambiental , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análiseRESUMO
Dam construction across the main flow of an estuary can greatly contribute to a high accumulation of inorganic contaminants. However, it remains unknown to what extend externally available heavy metals are incorporated into biota living in those contaminated environments. In this study, the heavy metal copper was investigated both in the sediment and in the tissues of nematodes taken from the subtidal zone in the Ba Lai estuary where a dam is present, and compared with samples from the dam-free Ham Luong estuary, both part of the Mekong Delta. Samples were taken in the dry season of 2017 in four stations in the Ba Lai estuary with two stations in the downstream part from the dam and two upstream. Similar locations with respect to the distance were sampled in the dam-free estuary. The internal copper concentration in nematodes was measured by applying micro X-ray fluorescence. The results showed that both internal and sediment copper concentrations were different between the two estuaries and among estuarine sections. The highest copper concentration in nematodes was found in the upstream section of Ba Lai estuary where the greatest accumulation of sedimentary copper was observed, while the dammed downstream part was lowest in internal copper accumulation. Moreover, there was more variation in the copper levels between the two sections within the dammed estuary compared to those in Ham Luong. These observations might point to the contribution of the Ba Lai dam to the increase of copper contaminants in the benthic environment leading to accumulation in nematodes.
Assuntos
Metais Pesados , Nematoides , Poluentes Químicos da Água , Animais , Estuários , Cobre , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análise , Metais Pesados/análise , Sedimentos GeológicosRESUMO
The impact of high siltation and accumulation of organic and waste material in the intertidal of the dammed Ba Lai River in Vietnam as part of the Mekong estuarine system was investigated by means of marine free-living nematodes. Nutrients content (nitrate, ammonium, total phosphorus, total nitrogen), total suspended solids, total organic carbon, coliform, bacteria E. coli, pH, dissolved oxygen, total dissolved solids, methane and hydrogen sulfide concentration, and the nematode communities were characterized in sediment at selected stations along the river above and below the dam. Our results found elevated methane concentrations at the upstream side of the dam while hydrogen sulfide concentrations found to be highest in the downstream side of the dam. Furthermore, methane and hydrogen sulfide concentrations were correlated to nematode community characteristics such as trophic composition densities and genera composition. There was a clear difference between the communities above and below the dam. The discontinuous nematode community distribution indicated that the Ba Lai River is impacted by dam construction. Potentially the high deposition and eutrophication could turn the area into a methane-rich area related to predicted impact on nematodes.
Assuntos
Compostos de Amônio , Sulfeto de Hidrogênio , Nematoides , Poluentes Químicos da Água , Animais , Estuários , Monitoramento Ambiental , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análise , Nitratos , Vietnã , Escherichia coli , Fósforo/análise , Nitrogênio/análise , Carbono , Metano , Oxigênio , Sedimentos Geológicos/químicaRESUMO
One of the options to mitigate atmospheric CO2 increase is CO2 Capture and Storage in sub-seabed geological formations. Since predicting long-term storage security is difficult, different CO2 leakage scenarios and impacts on marine ecosystems require evaluation. Submarine CO2 vents may serve as natural analogues and allow studying the effects of CO2 leakage in a holistic approach. At the study site east of Basiluzzo Islet off Panarea Island (Italy), gas emissions (90-99% CO2) occur at moderate flows (80-120â¯Lâ¯m-2â¯h-1). We investigated the effects of acidified porewater conditions (pHT range: 5.5-7.7) on the diversity of benthic bacteria and invertebrates by sampling natural sediments in three subsequent years and by performing a transplantation experiment with a duration of one year, respectively. Both multiple years and one year of exposure to acidified porewater conditions reduced the number of benthic bacterial operational taxonomic units and invertebrate species diversity by 30-80%. Reduced biodiversity at the vent sites increased the temporal variability in bacterial and nematode community biomass, abundance and composition. While the release from CO2 exposure resulted in a full recovery of nematode species diversity within one year, bacterial diversity remained affected. Overall our findings showed that seawater acidification, induced by seafloor CO2 emissions, was responsible for loss of diversity across different size-classes of benthic organisms, which reduced community stability with potential relapses on ecosystem resilience.