Biotic disturbance mitigates effects of multiple stressors in a marine benthic community

International audience Predicting how communities respond to multiple stressors is challenging because community dynamics, stressors, and animal-stressor interactions can vary with environmental conditions, including the intensity of natural disturbance. Nevertheless, environmental laws stipulate th...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ecosphere
Main Authors: Lenihan, Hunter, Peterson, Charles, Miller, Robert, Kayal, Mohsen, Potoski, Matthew
Other Authors: Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California Santa Barbara (UC Santa Barbara), University of California (UC)-University of California (UC)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.ird.fr/ird-03114524
https://hal.ird.fr/ird-03114524/document
https://hal.ird.fr/ird-03114524/file/2018%20Lenihan%20etal%20Biotic%20disturbance%20mitigates%20multiple%20stressor%20interactions.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2314
Description
Summary:International audience Predicting how communities respond to multiple stressors is challenging because community dynamics, stressors, and animal-stressor interactions can vary with environmental conditions, including the intensity of natural disturbance. Nevertheless, environmental laws stipulate that we predict, measure, and mitigate the ecological effects of some human-induced stressors in the environment, including chemical contaminants in aquatic ecosystems. We conducted an experiment in Antarctica to test how a marine soft-sediment benthic community responded to multiple chemical contaminants and biotic disturbance by manipulating organic carbon enrichment, copper metal contamination, access by large epibenthic animals, and their interaction. Biotic disturbance caused mainly by large echinoderms was manipulated with exclusion cages and cage-control treatments. Colonization patterns in sediment trays revealed that total infaunal abundance and arthropods decreased with toxic Cu (0, 100, and 500 ppm) and total organic carbon (TOC; 0%, 1%, and 2% by wt), as enrichment produced increasing levels of sediment hypoxia/anoxia. Annelids and echinoderms decreased with Cu but increased with TOC because many colonizing polychaete worms, seastars, and epifaunal sea urchins were deposit feeders. Bioturbation by echinoderms disturbed sediments, leading to a substantial decline in total infaunal abundance in uncontaminated sediments, but also an increase in the relative abundance in contaminated sediments, as bioturbation mitigated the effect of both chemical stressors. Biotic disturbance also caused substantial shifts in the species composition of the invertebrate assemblages and an overall increase in species diversity. Prior predictions about the response of benthic marine phyla to the separate and combined effects of Cu and carbon enrichment appear robust to variation in natural biotic disturbance.