4.6 Article

What ecological and functional changes follow the positioning of an artificial barrier? Answers from a 4-year investigation on soft bottom benthic communities

Journal

HYDROBIOLOGIA
Volume 848, Issue 20, Pages 4815-4835

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-021-04675-x

Keywords

Functional traits; beta-diversity; Coastal defence; Non-indigenous species; Macrofaunal invertebrates; Thyrrenian sea

Funding

  1. Villafranca Tirrena municipality

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The study found that the increasing use of artificial barriers to combat coastal erosion is causing alterations to coastal ecosystems, highlighting the importance of understanding their ecological functioning. Differences were observed in species composition and functional traits between sampling periods, with beta-diversity driven by species replacement over time. An increase in certain categories of benthic organisms was recorded during in and post-operam phases.
Increasing employment of artificial barriers to combat coastal erosion is causing alterations of coastal ecosystems. Understanding their ecological functioning is key to planning management activities and minimising their negative impacts on the ecosystem. In this paper, changes in biodiversity and in functional traits of macrofaunal shallow communities were investigated throughout 4 years of study in the central Mediterranean. Biodiversity indices (S, d, H') showed the highest mean values during in-operam phases (5.7, 1.99 and 2.07, respectively) whilst functional diversity (FDis) and functional redundancy (FDiv/H ') showed the highest mean values in ante-operam (4.34 and 2.44, respectively). The PERMANOVA showed differences both in species composition and functional traits between sampling periods. beta-diversity was driven by the replacement of species over years. The non-indigenous polychaete Lumbrinerides neogesae, recorded for the first time during in-operam, supplied the highest differences between years (14.5%, SIMPER). During in and post-operam phases an increase of sub-surface deposit feeder, tolerant, and pioneer categories was recorded. When the classic taxonomic approach is combined with novel functional biodiversity attributes, a wide range of biota responses to a disturbance can be better described and the efficient mitigation solutions to minimize negative impacts of human activities proposed.

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