From the individual to the community and beyond: water quality, stress indicators and key species in coastal waters

This review examines water quality and stress indicators at levels of organisation from the individual to the community and beyond by means of three case studies concentrating on rocky shores within the north-east Atlantic. Responses of dogwhelks (Nucella) to tributyltin pollution from antifouling p...

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Main Authors: Hawkins, S.J., Proud, S.V., Spence, S.K., Southward, A.J.
Other Authors: Sutcliffe, D.W.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Freshwater Biological Association 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/22811
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spelling ftoceandocs:oai:aquadocs.org:1834/22811 2023-05-15T17:38:42+02:00 From the individual to the community and beyond: water quality, stress indicators and key species in coastal waters Water quality & stress indicators in marine and freshwater systems: linking levels of organisation Hawkins, S.J. Proud, S.V. Spence, S.K. Southward, A.J. Sutcliffe, D.W. 1994 application/pdf 35-62 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/22811 en eng Freshwater Biological Association Ambleside, UK FBA Special Publications http://www.fba.org.uk/special-publications 0-900386-53-3 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/22811 http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/5304 1256 2011-09-29 15:07:04 5304 Freshwater Biological Association Ecology Oceanography Pollution Coastal zone Water quality Biological stress Pesticides Marine molluscs Oil spills Algae England book_section FALSE 1994 ftoceandocs 2023-04-06T17:02:13Z This review examines water quality and stress indicators at levels of organisation from the individual to the community and beyond by means of three case studies concentrating on rocky shores within the north-east Atlantic. Responses of dogwhelks (Nucella) to tributyltin pollution from antifouling paints is examined as the main case study. There are effects at the individual level (development of male sexual characteristics in the female leading to effective sterility) and population level (reduction in juveniles, few females and eventual population disappearance of dogwhelks in badly contaminated areas) but information on community level effects of dogwhelk demise is sparse. Such effects were simulated by dogwhelk removal experiments on well studied, moderately exposed ledges on shores on the Isle of Man. The removal of dogwhelks reduced the size and longevity of newly established Fucus clumps that had escaped grazing. Removal of dogwhelks also increased the likelihood of algal escapes. In a factorial experiment dogwhelks were shown to be less important than limpets \{Patella) in structuring communities but still had a significant modifying effect by increasing the probability of algal escapes. Community level responses to stress on rocky shores are then explored by reference to catastrophic impacts such as oil spills, using the Torrey Canyon as a case study. Recovery of the system in response to this major perturbation took between 10-15 years through a series of damped oscillations. The final case study is that of indicators of ecosystem level change in response to climate fluctuations, using ratios of northern \{Semibalanus balanoides) and southern (Chthamalus spp.) barnacles. Indices derived from counts on the shore show good correlations with inshore sea-water temperatures after a 2-year lag phase. The use of barnacles to measure offshore changes is reviewed. The discussion considers the use of bioindicators at various levels of organisation. Other/Unknown Material North East Atlantic Dogwhelk IODE-UNESCO: OceanDocs - E-Repository of Ocean Publications
institution Open Polar
collection IODE-UNESCO: OceanDocs - E-Repository of Ocean Publications
op_collection_id ftoceandocs
language English
topic Ecology
Oceanography
Pollution
Coastal zone
Water quality
Biological stress
Pesticides
Marine molluscs
Oil spills
Algae
England
spellingShingle Ecology
Oceanography
Pollution
Coastal zone
Water quality
Biological stress
Pesticides
Marine molluscs
Oil spills
Algae
England
Hawkins, S.J.
Proud, S.V.
Spence, S.K.
Southward, A.J.
From the individual to the community and beyond: water quality, stress indicators and key species in coastal waters
topic_facet Ecology
Oceanography
Pollution
Coastal zone
Water quality
Biological stress
Pesticides
Marine molluscs
Oil spills
Algae
England
description This review examines water quality and stress indicators at levels of organisation from the individual to the community and beyond by means of three case studies concentrating on rocky shores within the north-east Atlantic. Responses of dogwhelks (Nucella) to tributyltin pollution from antifouling paints is examined as the main case study. There are effects at the individual level (development of male sexual characteristics in the female leading to effective sterility) and population level (reduction in juveniles, few females and eventual population disappearance of dogwhelks in badly contaminated areas) but information on community level effects of dogwhelk demise is sparse. Such effects were simulated by dogwhelk removal experiments on well studied, moderately exposed ledges on shores on the Isle of Man. The removal of dogwhelks reduced the size and longevity of newly established Fucus clumps that had escaped grazing. Removal of dogwhelks also increased the likelihood of algal escapes. In a factorial experiment dogwhelks were shown to be less important than limpets \{Patella) in structuring communities but still had a significant modifying effect by increasing the probability of algal escapes. Community level responses to stress on rocky shores are then explored by reference to catastrophic impacts such as oil spills, using the Torrey Canyon as a case study. Recovery of the system in response to this major perturbation took between 10-15 years through a series of damped oscillations. The final case study is that of indicators of ecosystem level change in response to climate fluctuations, using ratios of northern \{Semibalanus balanoides) and southern (Chthamalus spp.) barnacles. Indices derived from counts on the shore show good correlations with inshore sea-water temperatures after a 2-year lag phase. The use of barnacles to measure offshore changes is reviewed. The discussion considers the use of bioindicators at various levels of organisation.
author2 Sutcliffe, D.W.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Hawkins, S.J.
Proud, S.V.
Spence, S.K.
Southward, A.J.
author_facet Hawkins, S.J.
Proud, S.V.
Spence, S.K.
Southward, A.J.
author_sort Hawkins, S.J.
title From the individual to the community and beyond: water quality, stress indicators and key species in coastal waters
title_short From the individual to the community and beyond: water quality, stress indicators and key species in coastal waters
title_full From the individual to the community and beyond: water quality, stress indicators and key species in coastal waters
title_fullStr From the individual to the community and beyond: water quality, stress indicators and key species in coastal waters
title_full_unstemmed From the individual to the community and beyond: water quality, stress indicators and key species in coastal waters
title_sort from the individual to the community and beyond: water quality, stress indicators and key species in coastal waters
publisher Freshwater Biological Association
publishDate 1994
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/22811
genre North East Atlantic
Dogwhelk
genre_facet North East Atlantic
Dogwhelk
op_source http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/5304
1256
2011-09-29 15:07:04
5304
Freshwater Biological Association
op_relation FBA Special Publications
http://www.fba.org.uk/special-publications
0-900386-53-3
http://hdl.handle.net/1834/22811
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