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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38546146

ABSTRACT

Marine plankton capable of photosynthesis and predation ("mixoplankton") comprise up to 50% of protist plankton and include many harmful species. However, marine environmental management policies, including the European Union Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) and the USEPA, assume a strict dichotomy between autotrophic phytoplankton and heterotrophic zooplankton. Mixoplankton often differ significantly from these two categories in their response to environmental pressures and affect the marine environment in ways we are only beginning to understand. While the management policies may conceptually provide scope for incorporating mixoplankton, such action is rarely implemented. We suggest that the effectiveness of monitoring and management programs could benefit from explicit implementations regarding the ecological roles and impact of mixoplankton. Taking the MSFD as an example of marine management guidelines, we propose appropriate methods to explicitly include mixoplankton in monitoring and marine management. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2024;00:1-18. © 2024 The Authors. Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society of Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry (SETAC).

2.
Mar Environ Res ; 178: 105663, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35660220

ABSTRACT

This study focussed on the long-term, sediment-driven changes of macrobenthic assemblages in dredged harbour sediment from Rotterdam harbour disposed of in excavated sand extraction pits off the Dutch coast. Macrobenthic species and sediment grain size composition were studied in samples from two disposal sites and the surrounding environment over ten years after the cessation of disposal activities. There was a strong association between the sediment granulometry and the benthic assemblage composition. Shortly after the last discharge, the top layer of the sediments in the pits contained 20%-60% mud (particles <63 µm) and was colonised by benthic species typical for these sediments. The pit sediments and benthic assemblages contrasted strongly with the surrounding medium-coarse sediment, extremely low in mud (<0.01%). Over eight to ten years, the top layers of the disposal sites became significantly less muddy (ca. 5%-15% mud), and the benthic assemblages changed over this period from mud-favouring species dominated by annelids to species preferring fine sand with relatively low mud percentages dominated by molluscs. The two different disposal sites converged in sediment composition and benthic assemblages over the ten years of monitoring. The contrast with the medium-coarse sediments with very low mud percentages remained even after this period. The use of sand extraction pits as disposal sites for dredged harbour sediments may be seen as an economically sound beneficial use option in dredged material management, albeit with long-term ecological effects.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring , Geologic Sediments , North Sea , Sand
3.
Mol Ecol ; 29(4): 686-703, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31989703

ABSTRACT

Recent papers have suggested that epifaunal organisms use artificial structures as stepping-stones to spread to areas that are too distant to reach in a single generation. With thousands of artificial structures present in the North Sea, we test the hypothesis that these structures are connected by water currents and act as an interconnected reef. Population genetic structure of the blue mussel, Mytilus edulis, was expected to follow a pattern predicted by a particle tracking model (PTM). Correlation between population genetic differentiation, based on microsatellite markers, and particle exchange was tested. Specimens of M. edulis were found at each location, although the PTM indicated that locations >85 km offshore were isolated from coastal subpopulations. The fixation coefficient FST correlated with the number of arrivals in the PTM. However, the number of effective migrants per generation as inferred from coalescent simulations did not show a strong correlation with the arriving particles. Isolation by distance analysis showed no increase in isolation with increasing distance and we did not find clear structure among the populations. The marine stepping-stone effect is obviously important for the distribution of M. edulis in the North Sea and it may influence ecologically comparable species in a similar way. In the absence of artificial shallow hard substrates, M. edulis would be unlikely to survive in offshore North Sea waters.


Subject(s)
Aquatic Organisms/growth & development , Genetics, Population , Marine Biology , Mytilus edulis/growth & development , Animals , North Sea
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