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1.
Environ Monit Assess ; 194(3): 199, 2022 Feb 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35178589

ABSTRACT

The present study highlights that seasonal salinity variability plays a significant role in meiobenthic distribution with special reference to nematode assemblages. Sediment and water samples were collected from Pulicat Lake, a hypersaline lake along the southeast coast of India during two seasons (Southwest Monsoon (SWM) and Northeast Monsoon (NEM)). Based on the salinity distribution, the lake is categorized into four regions, viz., southern inlet, central region, middle inlet, and northern inlet. Meiobenthic abundance was higher during SWM (226-12,206 Ind/10 cm2) than in NEM (640-10,424 Ind/10 cm2). The meiofaunal abundance was high in the central region during both the seasons, followed by the southern, northern, and middle inlet. The nematode was the dominant meiobenthic group, followed by copepod, polychaete, and foraminifera. Due to high organic matter, the central region was dominated by deposit feeding nematode species like Halalaimus longicaudatus and Terschellingia longicaudata. The southern and northern regions were dominated by free-living nematodes Rhabditis olitoria, Mesorhabditis capitata, Mononochus bastian, Paramononchus sp., Piranchulus sp., and Diploscapter cylindricus. Oncholaimus sp., a hypersaline indicator species, was reported from the middle inlet location. Statistical analysis suggests salinity as a critical parameter for the distribution and diversity of nematodes.


Subject(s)
Copepoda , Lakes , Animals , Environmental Monitoring , India , Salinity , Seasons
2.
Ecotoxicol Environ Saf ; 207: 111549, 2021 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33254407

ABSTRACT

Meiobenthos has been considered as an excellent tool for biomonitoring assessment. Elevated temperature and oil pollution are considered as the most pervasive aspects of global environmental changes and matter of concern for contemporary society. Presently, very limited information is available about the synergistic effect of these stressors on meiobenthic community structure and tolerance potential from tropical intertidal environment. Here, we assessed their impacts on meiobenthic community by conducting a 60 days long benthocosm experiment selecting three sets of temperature (25°, 30° and 35 °C) and two sets of diesel oil (low and high) combinations. Gradual changes in their community composition were revealed discernibly with exposures to both the disturbances after 30 and 60 days of experimental period. Diversity profiles for the nematodes were less affected, but copepods showed a graded response of decreasing density with increasing dose of both the stressors. Other meiobenthic taxa such as halacarid mite, turbellaria and polycheate juveniles were adversely affected and eliminated from the treatments, howbeit abundance of ostracods, foraminiferans and bivalve settlers varied significantly. A 3-factor PERMANOVA indicated a significant effect of temperature, diesel, between their interaction and interaction among stressors and time on meiofaunal abundances. In case of free-living nematodes, temperature rise and diesel contamination synchronously led to an elimination of k-selected species like Halalaimus gracilis, H. longicaudatus, Oxystomina aesetosa and Pomponema sp. with a significant decrease in abundance of H. capitulatus and Oncholaimus sp. The r-selected species Daptonema invagiferoum, Sabatieria praedatrix, Theristus acer, Monhystera sp. and Thalassomonhystera sp. had endured even at high doses of diesel treatment in three different temperatures set up. The effects were evident in term of changes in life strategies with an increment of opportunistic species and increased trophic diversity of deposit feeders in treated sediments. Overall, elevated temperature together with diesel oil contamination were found to alter species dynamics within shallow intertidal meiobenthic communities, which might have significant Armageddon on benthic ecosystem functioning.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Invertebrates/physiology , Petroleum Pollution , Temperature , Animals , Copepoda , Gasoline , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Nematoda/drug effects , Residence Characteristics
3.
Environ Monit Assess ; 192(2): 81, 2020 Jan 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31897611

ABSTRACT

Ecological quality (EcoQ) status of the Southwest and West coasts of South Korea was evaluated within the "National Investigation of Marine Ecosystems in Korea" in the 2015. In particular, the study dealt to assess the ecological quality of the sediments using free-living nematode communities. A total of 149 species were found in the study area, and Daptonema, Sabatieria, Parodontophora, Sphaerolaimus, and Viscosia were found as dominant genera. Statistical analysis of both environmental and faunal parameters showed an increasing human pressure from Western to Southern coasts. The community structure changed with the environmental features of the study area and allowed the detection of a suite of possible nematode indicators that might be used in monitoring studies. In particular, Dorylaimopsis spp. appeared heavy metal and organic matter resistant taxa, Sabatieria an eutrophication resistant genus, while Paracanthonchus and Neotonchus as heavy metal and organic matter sensitive genera. The principal component analysis (PCA) results showed a clear negative correlation between maturity index and both heavy metal and organic matter increasing, while diversity indices did not appear to be significantly influenced by them. Appling the thresholds of the synthetic nematode indices, the EcoQ of the study area was assessed as poor to moderate.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Nematoda/physiology , Water Pollution/analysis , Animals , Ecology , Eutrophication , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Human Activities , Metals, Heavy , Republic of Korea
4.
Zoolog Sci ; 36(3): 250-258, 2019 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31251494

ABSTRACT

A new species of stygobiontic interstitial annelid, Diurodrilus kunii sp. nov., is described based on material collected from medium sand sediment (ϕ = 1.2-1.7) at groundwater level (40-100 cm in depth; 5-15 m inland from splash zone) in the intertidal beach slope on Ishikari Beach, facing the Sea of Japan, Hokkaido, Japan. The new species differs from six known congeners in the arrangement of the anterior-head ventral ciliophores, the degree of development in the primary and secondary toes, and the shape of the spermatozoa. We inferred the phylogenetic position of the new species among other congeners for which 18S rRNA, 28S rRNA, and COI gene sequences were available in public databases. This is the first representative of the genus from the Northwest Pacific.


Subject(s)
Annelida/genetics , Phylogeny , Animal Distribution , Animals , Japan , RNA, Ribosomal, 18S/genetics , RNA, Ribosomal, 28S/genetics , Species Specificity
5.
Sci Total Environ ; 930: 172612, 2024 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38663602

ABSTRACT

Mangroves develop under environmental conditions and anthropogenic pressures whose impact on benthic meiofauna remains poorly understood. It is unclear how meiofauna communities are structured according to local sedimentary conditions. This study was designed to characterize the community structure of meiofauna and nematodes (dominant taxa) and the associated environmental forcings in intertidal mangrove sediments from Mayotte (Indo-West-Pacific), Martinique and Guadeloupe (Caribbean). Sediment cores were sampled at the end of the dry season at low tide on adult mangrove stands with similar immersion time. In each sediment layer, we analyzed redox potential, pH, porewater salinity, grain size, organic matter, metals, organic contaminants, prokaryotes and meiofauna. Our results show that sediments far from cities and agricultural fields trapped site-specific contaminants due to local water transport processes. Some metals, PAHs or pesticides exceeded toxicity thresholds in most of the studied stations, thus being harmful to benthic fauna. The sedimentary environment acts as a filter selecting specific meiofauna communities at station scale only in the Caribbean. In Mayotte, horizontal homogeneity contrasts with vertical heterogeneity of the sedimentary environment and the meiofauna. Nematode genera showed particular distribution patterns horizontally and vertically, suggesting the presence of sediment patches suitable for a restricted pool of genera on each island. Results in the Caribbean are consistent with nested diversity patterns due to environmental filtering. Conversely, horizontal homogeneity at Mayotte would reflect greater dispersal between stations or more spatially homogeneous anthropogenic pressures. The nematode genera present at depth may not be the most specialized, but the most versatile, capable of thriving in different conditions. Terschellingia and Daptonema showed contrasted responses to environmental forcing, likely due to their versatility, while Desmodora showed uniform responses between study areas, except when toxicity thresholds were exceeded. Our results emphasize that a given genus of nematode may respond differently to sedimentary conditions depending on sites.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring , Geologic Sediments , Nematoda , Wetlands , Animals , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Caribbean Region , Guadeloupe , Invertebrates
6.
R Soc Open Sci ; 11(6)2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39100149

ABSTRACT

Polychaetes are typically found in marine environments with limited species adapting to semi-terrestrial habitats. The genus Stygocapitella comprises interstitial polychaetes dwelling in sandy beach areas around or above the high-water line. Based on molecular data, previous studies suggested the presence of multiple cryptic species in some different localities in the world lumped together as Stygocapitella subterranea. In Japan, reports on Stygocapitella were scarce, with only one species having been documented 40 years ago at Ishikari Beach in Hokkaido by the name of S. subterranea. We revisited these earlier findings and uncovered the presence of two distinct species in Stygocapitella. One of these species is herein named Stygocapitella itoi sp. nov., while the other corresponds to S. budaevae, originally described from the Russian Far East. Stygocapitella itoi sp. nov. possesses a chaetal pattern similar to that of S. australis, S. furcata and S. pacifica but can be distinguished from the congeners by two characters: a slightly forked pygidium and forked chaetae consisting of two teeth and two outer prongs. Our multi-locus phylogenetic analysis showed close relationships across the Pacific Ocean in two separated lineages in the genus, suggesting ancient dispersal or allopatric speciation after vicariance events.

8.
Sci Total Environ ; 918: 170657, 2024 Mar 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38320703

ABSTRACT

The meiofaunal diversity is used as an indicator to assess the complex and diverse impacts on the coastal environment during the natural calamities. The present study evaluates the effects of Mandous cyclone on ecologically two different stations, Pattinampakkam beach and Adyar estuary, which are located on Chennai coast, Tamil Nadu, India. The impact of the Mandous cyclone on physico-chemical parameters and meiobenthic faunal composition was investigated during, prior to, and after the cyclone. Thirty-nine species of meiofauna belonging to 15 taxa were recorded in both the stations. Nematoda, Oligochaeta and Harpacticoida taxa occurred with higher diversity and abundance than other meiofaunal taxa. Among these taxa, Polygastrophora sp. of Nematoda, Grania pusilla of Oligochaeta, and Arenosetella indica of Harpacticoida were the predominant species recorded during the study period. There was a prominent decline in the population density of meiofauna due to the Mandous cyclone, and thereafter, it took three weeks for recolonization and restoration to normalcy. Statistically, significant impact of the Mandous cyclone on the diversity, density, and evenness of the meiofaunal community with abiotic factors were observed through the Ecological indices and Canonical Correspondence Analysis. The Mandous cyclone assessment with special emphasis on meiofaunal communities allowed to fill the gap with knowledge regarding the diversity, abundance, composition, and distribution of meiofauna between pre- and post-Mandous cyclone, which helped in understanding the physico-chemical changes and response of meiofauna in a sandy beach and estuary.

9.
PeerJ ; 12: e17641, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39099655

ABSTRACT

Background: Due to the copious disposal of plastics, marine ecosystems receive a large part of this waste. Microplastics (MPs) are solid particles smaller than 5 millimeters in size. Among the plastic polymers, polystyrene (PS) is one of the most commonly used and discarded. Due to its density being greater than that of water, it accumulates in marine sediments, potentially affecting benthic communities. This study investigated the ingestion of MP and their effect on the meiofauna community of a sandy beach. Meiofauna are an important trophic link between the basal and higher trophic levels of sedimentary food webs and may therefore be substantially involved in trophic transfer of MP and their associated compounds. Methods: We incubated microcosms without addition of MP (controls) and treatments contaminated with PS MP (1-µm) in marine sediments at three nominal concentrations (103, 105, 107particles/mL), for nine days, and sampled for meiofauna with collections every three days. At each sampling time, meiofauna were collected, quantified and identified to higher-taxon level, and ingestion of MP was quantified under an epifluorescence microscope. Results: Except for Tardigrada, all meiofauna taxa (Nematoda, turbellarians, Copepoda, Nauplii, Acari and Gastrotricha) ingested MP. Absorption was strongly dose dependent, being highest at 107 particles/mL, very low at 105 particles/mL and non-demonstrable at 103 particles/mL. Nematodes accumulated MP mainly in the intestine; MP abundance in the intestine increased with increasing incubation time. The total meiofauna density and species richness were significantly lower at the lowest MP concentration, while at the highest concentration these parameters were very similar to the control. In contrast, Shannon-Wiener diversity and evenness were greater in treatments with low MP concentration. However, these results should be interpreted with caution because of the low meiofauna abundances at the lower two MP concentrations. Conclusion: At the highest MP concentration, abundance, taxonomic diversity and community structure of a beach meiofauna community were not significantly affected, suggesting that MP effects on meiofauna are at most subtle. However, lower MP concentrations did cause substantial declines in abundance and diversity, in line with previous studies at the population and community level. While we can only speculate on the underlying mechanism(s) of this counterintuitive response, results suggest that further research is needed to better understand MP effects on marine benthic communities.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Microplastics , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Animals , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Food Chain , Aquatic Organisms , Polystyrenes , Invertebrates/drug effects , Environmental Monitoring/methods
10.
Saudi J Biol Sci ; 28(12): 7061-7067, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34867007

ABSTRACT

Distinctive studies were conducted for the identification of meiobenthos and zooplankton at Farasan Islands and Jizan sandy shores. The present work compares the meiobenthos and zooplankton communities at Alhsas sandy shore at Farasan Islands and As-Suways sandy shore at Jizan. Population density, species richness and Shannon-Weiner diversity index were determined for meiobenthos and zooplankton inhabiting both the studied sites. Water criteria; surface water temperature, pH and conductivity were determined for each investigated site. Eleven zooplankton species were defined at Alhsas sandy shore Farasan, nine species were identified at the littoral zone at As-Suways sandy shore, Jizan. Ten meiobenthos species were defined at Alhsas site, Farasan. Only eight meiobenthos species were defined at the intertidal zone of As-Suways site, Jizan. The results were discussed to highlight the effect of water criteria on the spatial distribution of zooplankton and meiobenthos at the investigated sites.

11.
Zootaxa ; 4927(4): zootaxa.4927.4.3, 2021 Feb 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33756689

ABSTRACT

Haloschizopera cheni sp. n., was recognized from our latest collections from the East China Sea. The new species is similar to H. abyssi Becher, 1974 but differs from it by the following combined features: baseoendopodal lobe of female P5 with five setae, P2 and P3 enp-3 both longer than enp-1-2 combined, and caudal rami longer than broad. Comparison of all the known species of Haloschizopera was performed. Species in the genus can be divided into four groups by the setal formulae of P3 and P4. The main diagnostic characters of each species are listed and a key to all known species of Haloschizopera is also provided.


Subject(s)
Copepoda , Animal Structures , Animals , Female
12.
Data Brief ; 36: 107112, 2021 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34041317

ABSTRACT

We present the presence/absence species list (Table 1) of rotifer, cladoceran, and copepod (Calanoida, Harpacticoida, and Cyclopoida) fauna from seven Arctic regions of Russia (the Kola Peninsula, the Pechora River Delta, the Bolshezemelskaya tundra, the Polar Ural, the Putorana Plateau, the Lena River Delta, and the Indigirka River Basin) based on our own and literature data. Our own records were obtained by analyzing samples of zooplankton, meiobenthos, and two cores of bottom sediments (from the Kola Peninsula and the Bolshezemelskaya tundra lakes) that we collected once in July or August in 1992, 1995-2017. To supplement the list, we used relevant literature with periods of research from the 1960s to the 2010s. The list is almost identical to "Dataset 2: Zooplankton and Meiofauna across Arctic Regions of Russia", which was analyzed but not published in [1]. The detailed analysis of this list revealed the specific composition of the aquatic fauna associated with the climatic and geographical factors [1]. The data provide information on the current state of biodiversity and species richness in Arctic fresh waters and can serve as the basis for monitoring these environments and predicting how they are likely to change in the future.

13.
PeerJ ; 8: e8506, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32095348

ABSTRACT

A new species of Sarsamphiascus Huys, 2009 was collected from sandy sediments of Hawaii at 12 -18 m depth. While the new species, Sarsamphiascus hawaiiensis sp. nov., is morphologically most closely related to S. kawamurai (Ueda & Nagai, 2005), the two species can be distinguished by the combination of the following morphological characteristics: elongated segments of the antennule in the new species, type of outer setae of the P5 exopod (bare in S. kawamurai), position of the inner seta of the P5 exopod in both sexes (more proximal in S. kawamurai), length and type of the setae of female P6 (shorter and bare in S. kawamurai). This is the first species of Sarsamphiascus from Hawaii to be discovered. Molecular analyses of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (mtCOI) and nuclear 18S ribosomal RNA (18S rRNA) genes confirmed that S. hawaiiensis and S. kawamurai are distinct species.

14.
Hydrobiologia ; 847(12): 2587-2595, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32836347

ABSTRACT

Never heard of harpacticoids, ostracods, gastrotrichs or microturbellarians? This is no surprise, they are so tiny! Yet these taxa and many others more famous (nematodes, rotifers, or tardigrades) show complex behaviours and extraordinary physiologies that allow them to colonize inland waters worldwide. This exuberant fauna is better known as the meiofauna (or meiobenthos). Meiofaunal organisms have been fascinating study objects for zoologists since the seventeenth century and recent research has demonstrated their intermediate role in benthic food webs. This special issue highlights how meiofauna can help freshwater ecologists to describe and predict species distribution patterns, to assess production of biomass and trait functions relationships, as well as to examine the trophic links between microscopic and macroscopic worlds and to better understand species' resilience to environmental extremes. Overall, meiofaunal organisms are bridging scales, and as such they deserve better integration to develop more comprehensive concepts and theories in ecology.

15.
Zootaxa ; 4755(3): zootaxa.4755.3.8, 2020 Mar 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32230173

ABSTRACT

A new marine tardigrade, Moebjergarctus clarionclippertonensis sp. nov., is described based on specimens collected from a manganese nodule area in the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone of the abyssal North-eastern Pacific. The new species is a member of the bathyal/abyssal subfamily Euclavarctinae Renaud-Mornant, 1983. Within the Euclavarctinae, the genus Moebjergarctus Bussau, 1992, with only one described species, M. manganis Bussau, 1992, is characterised by simple claws, club-shaped and anteriorly bent primary clavae, well-developed spherical secondary clavae and cephalic cirri separated into three parts: short cirrophore, long and annulated scapus, and a short flagellum. Moebjergarctus clarionclippertonensis sp. nov. can be distinguished from M. manganis by the morphology of cephalic cirri which have scapi annulated only in the proximal part and by the presence of a caudodorsal bulge covered by a crescent-shaped cuticular thickening.


Subject(s)
Tardigrada , Animals , Pacific Ocean
16.
Zootaxa ; 4780(1): zootaxa.4780.1.5, 2020 May 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33055758

ABSTRACT

Samples collected from Monte Hermoso, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina revealed the presence of specimens of the genus Franciscideres Dal Zotto et al., 2013, previously known only from Brazil. This morphotype seems to differ from the only known species, Franciscideres kalenesos Dal Zotto et al., 2013, in the following characters: (1) presence of ventrolateral tubes on segment 1, (2) introvert features, (3) each segment composed of a closed cuticular ring, (4) trunk cuticle ornamented by a secondary fringe of knob-like structures, (5) posterior margin of segment 10 ventrally terminating in two lateral and one broad triangular lobes, (6) posterior margin of segment 11 centrally terminating in four lobes (7) lateral terminal spines armed with thorn-like processes, (8) pores/sensory spots/gland cells distribution and (9) sexual dimorphism in segments 10 and 11. Because of the lack of full information about F. kalenesos from Brazil, we consider the new exemplars as Franciscideres cf. kalenesos. Additionally, we provide new information about the movement of this species using light microscopy and we compare these movements with those of other meiofaunal inhabitants.


Subject(s)
Invertebrates , Movement , Sex Characteristics , Animals , Argentina , Microscopy
17.
Zootaxa ; 4859(4): zootaxa.4859.4.3, 2020 Oct 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33056181

ABSTRACT

Three new species of free-living marine nematodes, Phanodermopsis dordi sp. nov., Halalaimus shinkai sp. nov., and Oxystomina hakureiae sp. nov. are described from the abyssal sediments of the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone, North Pacific. Phanodermopsis dordi sp. nov. differs from the congeners by having papilliform anterior sensilla and a long conical tail with an acute tip. Halalaimus shinkai sp. nov., belonging to Keppner's group 2 based on the presence of caudal alae and the absence of precloacal sensillum or pore, can be distinguished from all of the members of this group by the presence of lateral pieces of gubernacula. Oxystomina hakureiae sp. nov. differs from the congeners by the short setiform anterior sensilla, the amphid located posterior to cephalic sensilla, the conico-cylindrical tail in both sexes, the spicules with a velum and a capitulum, the presence of the gubernacula and the precloacal setae, and the diorchic and monodelphic reproductive systems. The amended dichotomous keys to the species of Phanodermopsis, Halalaimus group 2, and Oxystomina are provided. A new combination Nemanema arenaria (Bussau, 1990) comb. nov. transferred from Oxystomina is also provided.


Subject(s)
Enoplida , Nematoda , Animals , Female , Male
18.
Zootaxa ; 4608(3): zootaxa.4608.3.4, 2019 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31717133

ABSTRACT

Two new and one known species of free-living marine nematode belonging to the family Phanodermatidae are described. They were collected during the 12th Japanese Association for Marine Biology (JAMBIO) Coastal Organism Joint Survey off Jogashima, Japan in Sagami Bay, North Pacific Ocean. Phanodermopsis kohtsukai sp. nov. differs from the congeners by the shape of the tail, the longer spicules, and the absence of the gubernaculum. Micoletzkyia nakanoi sp. nov. differs from the congeners by the absence of a circle of cervical setae, the proportion of the tail, the cylindrical gubernaculum without projection, and the position of the vulva. Crenopharynx caudata (Filipjev, 1927) comb. nov. is transferred from the genus Phanodermopsis based on the presence of the long spicules. The morphological characters of the newly collected specimens of C. caudata comb. nov. are in excellent agreement with those shown in the original description of the specimens from Arctic Russia and the previous redescription of the specimens from Skagerrak. The new diagnoses and species lists for these three genera and two dichotomous keys to the males of Micoletzkyia and Crenopharynx are provided.


Subject(s)
Enoplida , Nematoda , Animals , Bays , Female , Japan , Male , Pacific Ocean , Russia
19.
MethodsX ; 5: 1330-1335, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30402387

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study was to develop a new method for investigating sediment-inhabiting meiobenthos using the Flow Cytometer And Microscope (FlowCAM). Meiobenthos are widely recognized as a useful indicator for assessing the effects of anthropogenic and natural disturbances in both shallow and deep ocean ecosystems. These small benthic invertebrates are traditionally investigated by individually counting and identifying specimens under a microscope, which is labor intensive and time consuming. However, FlowCAM, which was originally developed to semiautomatically analyze microplankton, has the potential to resolve these challenges. Meiobenthic specimens were extracted from sediment using the centrifugal separation method and were then pipetted into the FlowCAM system and imaged. The images were then used to classify and count the specimens at high taxonomic levels to verify the effectiveness of this method compared with traditional methods. We found that FlowCAM system: •Enabled sufficient meiobenthic images to be obtained to allow the identification and classification of specimens at high taxonomic levels.•Obtained comparable numbers of individuals to traditional methods.•Has the potential to rapidly process large the volumes of meiobenthos samples that are required when monitoring seasonal and spatial variation in ocean ecosystems and conducting long-term environmental impact assessments.

20.
Mar Environ Res ; 142: 163-177, 2018 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30348474

ABSTRACT

Global climate change and the related temperature rise strongly impact marine life and have long been in the center of scientific attention. This experimental work investigates thermal-stress effects on intertidal meiofauna from tropical and temperate coasts, focusing on community responses. Natural communities were exposed for a month to ambient, elevated constant temperatures and diurnal fluctuating temperature regimes with elevated peak maxima, to mimic realistic future climate conditions. Abundance, biodiversity, community composition and functional diversity were assessed. Differential responses between a tropical and a temperate community were revealed. The tropical nematode assemblage was more tolerant to the elevated constant than to the fluctuating temperature regime, whereas the temperate assemblage was equally affected by both. Shifts in dominance of temperature-tolerant species in elevated constant and fluctuating temperature treatments (due to temperature variations) were observed and explained by a combination of differential tolerances and shifts in species interactions. Overall, global warming-induced temperature was found to alter species dynamics within meiobenthic communities, which may have further implications for the ecosystem.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Global Warming , Nematoda/physiology , Temperature , Animals , Population Density
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