Macrofaunal density, biomass and composition of estuarine sediments and their relationship to the river plume of the Rhone River (NW Mediterranean) |
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Authors: | Rachel Hermand Chantal Salen-Picard Elisabeth Alliot Claude Degiovanni |
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Affiliation: | aCentre d'Océanologie de Marseille, UMR CNRS 6540 DIMAR, Université de la Méditerranée, Station Marine d'Endoume, 13007 Marseille, France;bCentre d'Océanologie de Marseille, UMR CNRS 6540 DIMAR, Université de la Méditerranée, Campus de Luminy, Case 901, 13288 Marseille Cedex 09, France |
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Abstract: | This study investigates species community patterns and sediment relationships of benthic macrofauna off the Rhone river delta. Along a WE transect, changes in diversity, density, biomass and trophic structure were coupled with the mean extension of the river dilution plume. Species number and diversity were at a minimum off the river mouth, below the area of the minimum surface salinity. Density decreased by a factor 2 and biomass by a factor 5 from the fluvial to the marine system. These features are due to high overload of terrestrial organic matter in the river prodelta as evidenced by the carbon isotopic signature of surface sediment and by pigment content. On the basis of a non-metric MDS analysis and of Dufrêne and Legendre method (1997), groups of stations and characteristic species associated were identified. These species, mainly small capitellids, spionids, lumbrinerids and sternaspids, correspond to a successional dynamic in response to changes in sedimentation conditions, mainly in organic matter quality of the surface sediment. The succession observed in space was similar to described in macrotidal estuaries and off other deltaic systems all over the world and to that observed in time following the Rhone river severe flood events. Results suggest that organic matter quality is an important factor with regard to benthic macrofauna successions and recovery mechanisms following disturbances. The differences observed between the Rhone deltaic system and the general model of relations between shelf processes and discharge of large rivers are attributed to a more regular supply of organic material from terrestrial origin on the Rhone continental shelf. |
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Keywords: | benthic macrofauna dilution plume terrestrial inputs organic enrichment NW Mediterranean Sea |
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