4.6 Article

Subtidal macrophyte diversity and potentials in Nha Trang Bay-baseline data for monitoring a rising natural resource

Journal

ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE
Volume 259, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2021.107460

Keywords

Macroalgal diversity; Seagrass beds; Benthic harmful algal blooms (BHABs); Light attenuation coefficient (Kd); Sediment characteristics; Bioactive compounds; Viet Nam; Nha Trang Bay

Funding

  1. Merck KGaA
  2. Minerva Post-doc Fellowship

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Viet Nam, particularly Nha Trang Bay, is a hotspot for high diversity of algal species within tropical coastal ecosystems. The study reveals the potential and impact of macrophytic bio-resources in the area, highlighting the importance of monitoring and understanding environmental factors for biodiversity conservation and utilization.
Tropical coastal ecosystems provide a unique complex marine habitat with a high diversity of algal species, Viet Nam being a particular hotspot. These algae may host a variety of potential unknown or underestimated bioactive algal compounds. In parallel the worldwide rising interest in macroalgae-based products leads to increasing activities in seaweed natural harvest and mariculture within coastal waters. With this growing interest, the present work provides baseline data for a systematic and science-based macroalgal monitoring program in Nha Trang Bay, Viet Nam, to keep track of potentially interesting taxa and to identify driving environmental factors which may also naturally influence biodiversity and species abundance. The present study investigated macrophyte diversity and abundance by combining a qualitative and quantitative macroalgal survey approach with environmental sampling (e.g. physicochemical properties of water column, underwater light regime, and sediment characteristics). Surveys were performed in the dry season (May/June) 2019 in different water depths (3, 6 and 10 m) at seven sites within Nha Trang Bay. The study revealed a coastal patchwork of diverse habitats inhabited by complex macrophyte communities, including estuarine dense Sargassum forests and Turbinaria meadows, sheltered sandy seagrass (Halodule spp.) beds with upcoming Lyngbya blooms, low diverse Padina deserts and highly turbid aquaculture (lobster and fish farms) impacted sites with surprisingly high macroalgal diversity. During our study a total of 86 macrophyte species were encountered in the subtidal (>1 m water depth), whereas only 6 species (Padina australis, Sargassum mcclurei, Turbinaria ornata, Halimeda discoidea, Amphiroa fragilissima, Tricleocarpa cylindrical) were frequently found at every survey site. The observed high patchiness and presence of economically important (e.g. Sargassum spp., Gracilaria spp., Caulerpa spp., Gelidiella acerosa, Acanthophora spicifera) and potentially economically interesting (e.g. Padina australis, Turbinaria ornata, Stypopodium zonale, Chondria armata) taxa during the survey underlines the high potential of the present macrophytic bio-resource, which apparently is strongly structured and will be altered by the changing heterogenic environment.

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