Trends in the species composition at the southernmost estuary of the Atlantic coast of Europe

Trabajo presentado en Symposium on Decadal Variability of the North Atlantic and its Marine Ecosystems: 2010-2019, celebrado en Bergen (Noruega) del 20 al 22 de junio de 2022. Climate change may enhance the establishment of introduced species, as well as the poleward shift in distribution of numerou...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: González-Ortegón, Enrique, Cuesta, José A., Baldó, Francisco, Vilas, César
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/309395
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Summary:Trabajo presentado en Symposium on Decadal Variability of the North Atlantic and its Marine Ecosystems: 2010-2019, celebrado en Bergen (Noruega) del 20 al 22 de junio de 2022. Climate change may enhance the establishment of introduced species, as well as the poleward shift in distribution of numerous species over decades. Long-term research and monitoring of an ecosystem at the southernmost point of the Atlantic coast of Europe should be an important priority in order to detect and understand trends in species composition and the related environmental changes. The Guadalquivir estuary (South Spain) is more likely to suffer the exacerbated effects of climate change due to its location in the Mediterranean-climate zone. The long-term data set between 1997 and 2015 in this estuary has allowed us to analyse the variability of the natural and anthropogenic stressors, especially in some dry years and how records of new species have been stabilised as a consequence of expanded connectivity (shipping) and “African Creep”. The mean interannual dissimilarity of the estuarine fauna (Bray–Curtis dissimilarity index) has showed important differences throughout the years, and the species that most contributed to these differences were the exotic species capable of completing their life cycles. Their average annual density has shown a continuous increase during the years of study in a period of expansion. This long-term monitoring of the estuarine community has allowed us to anticipate future events and ecological risk assessment in Europe due to climate change. Management implications are mainly related to the catching of exotic species to control their impact on native communities and reduce the shipping in this sort of ecosystem, which have been especially sensitive in the last 10 years.