Light energy as a cause of structural and functional variations in brackish water littoral mesocosms used in ecotoxicological research

The significance of two vital ecosystem regulating factors, i.e. light and temperature, was studied in littoral brackish water mesocosms during a four month experiment. Conspicuous light energy-related structural and functional responses were observed in the mesocosms. Functionally, the horizontal t...

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Main Authors: Lehtinen, K.-J., Mattsson, K., Tana, J., Grotell, C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Boreal Environment Research Publishing Board 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/577972
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spelling ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/577972 2024-09-15T18:00:08+00:00 Light energy as a cause of structural and functional variations in brackish water littoral mesocosms used in ecotoxicological research Lehtinen, K.-J. Mattsson, K. Tana, J. Grotell, C. 2024-06-27T13:44:28Z 71-83 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/577972 eng eng Boreal Environment Research Publishing Board Boreal Environment Research 1239-6095 1797-2469 1 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/577972 Suomen ympäristökeskus CC BY 4.0 openAccess Artikkeli lehdessä 2024 ftunivhelsihelda 2024-08-21T23:48:04Z The significance of two vital ecosystem regulating factors, i.e. light and temperature, was studied in littoral brackish water mesocosms during a four month experiment. Conspicuous light energy-related structural and functional responses were observed in the mesocosms. Functionally, the horizontal transport of organic carbon increased with lower temperature and light conditions. Systems with lower temperature and less light adapted by increasing phytoplanktic production instead of periphytic growth. All systems seemed to be nitrogen limited. Sedimentation was lower in colder than in warmer systems. Colder systems contained less organic carbon in the sediment but only insignificantly less carbon was bound in the macroscopic organisms in these systems as compared with warmer systems. This indicates adaptatory mechanisms on the structural level, as observed by invertebrate and fish studies. Small sized Jaera spp. was favoured by less efficient system carbon binding capacity. Typical littoral species such as Gammarus spp. and Theodoxus fluviatilis were favoured by efficient carbon binding environments and higher temperature. Lower temperature favoured mollusc species such as Macoma baltica and Mytilus edulis. Fish fry were favoured by higher temperature at the individual level but population mortality was negatively affected. The results obtained show that mesocosms are sensitive systems that rapidly respond to external perturbations, including pollution. However, in order to separate responses caused by natural variability from those caused by pollution, it is important that both structure and function are measured. Article in Journal/Newspaper Boreal Environment Research HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
institution Open Polar
collection HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
op_collection_id ftunivhelsihelda
language English
description The significance of two vital ecosystem regulating factors, i.e. light and temperature, was studied in littoral brackish water mesocosms during a four month experiment. Conspicuous light energy-related structural and functional responses were observed in the mesocosms. Functionally, the horizontal transport of organic carbon increased with lower temperature and light conditions. Systems with lower temperature and less light adapted by increasing phytoplanktic production instead of periphytic growth. All systems seemed to be nitrogen limited. Sedimentation was lower in colder than in warmer systems. Colder systems contained less organic carbon in the sediment but only insignificantly less carbon was bound in the macroscopic organisms in these systems as compared with warmer systems. This indicates adaptatory mechanisms on the structural level, as observed by invertebrate and fish studies. Small sized Jaera spp. was favoured by less efficient system carbon binding capacity. Typical littoral species such as Gammarus spp. and Theodoxus fluviatilis were favoured by efficient carbon binding environments and higher temperature. Lower temperature favoured mollusc species such as Macoma baltica and Mytilus edulis. Fish fry were favoured by higher temperature at the individual level but population mortality was negatively affected. The results obtained show that mesocosms are sensitive systems that rapidly respond to external perturbations, including pollution. However, in order to separate responses caused by natural variability from those caused by pollution, it is important that both structure and function are measured.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lehtinen, K.-J.
Mattsson, K.
Tana, J.
Grotell, C.
spellingShingle Lehtinen, K.-J.
Mattsson, K.
Tana, J.
Grotell, C.
Light energy as a cause of structural and functional variations in brackish water littoral mesocosms used in ecotoxicological research
author_facet Lehtinen, K.-J.
Mattsson, K.
Tana, J.
Grotell, C.
author_sort Lehtinen, K.-J.
title Light energy as a cause of structural and functional variations in brackish water littoral mesocosms used in ecotoxicological research
title_short Light energy as a cause of structural and functional variations in brackish water littoral mesocosms used in ecotoxicological research
title_full Light energy as a cause of structural and functional variations in brackish water littoral mesocosms used in ecotoxicological research
title_fullStr Light energy as a cause of structural and functional variations in brackish water littoral mesocosms used in ecotoxicological research
title_full_unstemmed Light energy as a cause of structural and functional variations in brackish water littoral mesocosms used in ecotoxicological research
title_sort light energy as a cause of structural and functional variations in brackish water littoral mesocosms used in ecotoxicological research
publisher Boreal Environment Research Publishing Board
publishDate 2024
url http://hdl.handle.net/10138/577972
genre Boreal Environment Research
genre_facet Boreal Environment Research
op_relation Boreal Environment Research
1239-6095
1797-2469
1
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/577972
Suomen ympäristökeskus
op_rights CC BY 4.0
openAccess
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