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Effects of mud sedimentation on lugworm ecosystem engineering
Authors:F. Montserrat  W. Suykerbuyk  R. Al-Busaidi  T.J. Bouma  D. van der Wal  P.M.J. Herman
Affiliation:1. AZTI-Tecnalia, Marine Research Division, Txatxarramendi irla z/g, 48395, Sukarrieta, Spain;2. Radboud University Nijmegen, Department of Environmental Science, Institute for Water and Wetland Research, Heyendaalseweg 135, 6525 AJ Nijmegen, The Netherlands;3. Directorate-general for Public Works and Water Management, Division Zeeland of the Ministry of the Infrastructure and Environment, P.O. Box 8039, NL-4330 EA Middelburg, The Netherlands;4. Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), P.O. Box 140, 4400AC Yerseke, The Netherlands;5. University of Granada, Department of Ecology, Andalusian Environmental Centre, Avda. del Mediterráneo s/n, 18006, Granada, Spain;6. AZTI-Tecnalia, Marine Research Division, Herrera Kaia, Portualdea z/g, E-20110 Pasaia, Spain
Abstract:Benthic ecosystem engineering organisms attenuate hydrodynamic or biogeochemical stress to ameliorate living conditions. Bioturbating infauna, like the lugworm Arenicola marina, determine intertidal process dynamics by maintaining the sediment oxygenated and sandy. Maintaining the permeability of the surrounding sediment enables them to pump water through the interstitial spaces, greatly increasing the oxygen availability. In a field experiment, both lugworm presence and siltation regime were manipulated to investigate to what extent lugworms are able to cope with sedimentation of increasing mud percentage and how this would affect its ecosystem engineering. Fluorescent tracers were added to experimentally deposited mud to visualise bioturbation effects on fine sediment fractions. Lugworm densities were not affected by an increasing mud percentage in experimentally deposited sediment. Negative effects are expected to occur under deposition with significantly higher mud percentages. Surface chlorophyll a content was a function of experimental mud percentage, with no effect of lugworm bioturbation. Surface roughness and sediment permeability clearly increased by lugworm presence, whereas sediment erosion threshold was not significantly affected by lugworms. The general idea that A. marina removes fine sediment fractions from the bed could not be confirmed. Rather, the main ecosystem engineering effect of A. marina is hydraulic destabilisation of the sediment matrix.
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