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Evidence for Systemic Changes in the Benthic Fauna of Tropical Estuaries as a Result of Urbanization
Authors:Graeme J Inglis  Jacob E Kross
Institution:

aSchool of Tropical Environment Studies and Geography, James Cook University, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia

bCRC Reef Research Centre, James Cook University, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia

Abstract:The effects of urban development cause substantial physical changes in coastal waterways through hardening and reclamation of river banks, alteration of water flow, and diffuse and point-source discharges of pollutants. The cumulative effects of urbanization on the fauna of estuaries are not well understood. This study examined the benthic infauna of two urban and three rural estuaries near Townsville, North Queensland. A range of univariate and multivariate statistics was used to relate variation in the benthic assemblages to concentrations of contaminants (heavy metals and hydrocarbons) within the sediments of each estuary. Sediments in the most developed estuary contained concentrations of heavy metals and petroleum hydrocarbons that were several orders of magnitude greater than those from non-urban waterways. The fauna at these sites was dominated by cirratulid and sternaspid polychaetes and lacked filter-feeding bivalves and other molluscs that were common in less developed estuaries. These differences were generally consistent throughout each estuary, indicating estuary-wide patterns of change, that were most strongly associated with spatial patterns in the distribution of Pb, Cu and hydrocarbons.
Keywords:heavy metals  macrobenthos  petroleum hydrocarbons  scales of variation  urban pollution
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