Effects of disturbance on macrofaunalbiodiversity‐ecosystemfunctioning relationships in seagrass habitats

Abstract Seagrass beds support diverse macrofaunal communities, and collectively they influence carbon and nutrient cycles; however, we know little on how seagrass disturbance alters this relationship. In Newfoundland, Canada, the invasive European green crab Carcinus maenas threatens the seagrass Z...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Ecology
Main Authors: Colvin, T. J., Snelgrove, P. V. R.
Other Authors: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/maec.12753
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/maec.12753
Description
Summary:Abstract Seagrass beds support diverse macrofaunal communities, and collectively they influence carbon and nutrient cycles; however, we know little on how seagrass disturbance alters this relationship. In Newfoundland, Canada, the invasive European green crab Carcinus maenas threatens the seagrass Zostera marina by snipping and uprooting seagrasses while foraging and burrowing. In order to understand the effects of seagrass disturbance on macrofaunal diversity and ecosystem functioning within sediments, we experimentally uprooted small patches of seagrass and compared rates of oxygen and nutrient fluxes from sediment cores from uprooted (disturbed) patches, seagrasses, and unvegetated sediments nearby. In parallel, we assessed macrofaunal biodiversity (taxonomic and functional) and sedimentary (granulometric properties and organic matter content/freshness) variables in all three of these treatments over a three‐month period. As expected, macrofaunal abundance, species richness and functional richness declined significantly initially in disturbed cores, although this decrease had little effect on benthic flux rates. Over 3 months, macrofaunal colonization of the disturbed sediments resulted in abundances similar to the natural seagrass and unvegetated treatments. We also observed a change in nutrient flux rates that we attribute to seasonal shifts in regeneration pathways rather than macrofaunal community recovery, suggesting a lesser role for macrofaunal diversity in carbon and nutrient cycling in dynamic nearshore habitats than in deeper water. Our results demonstrate the impacts of green crab‐mediated seagrass disturbance on macrofaunal abundance and community structure while highlighting their potential capacity for rapid stabilization, and emphasize the strength of large‐scale seasonal environmental changes on ecosystem processes.