Journal
MARINE BIOLOGY
Volume 168, Issue 10, Pages -Publisher
SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00227-021-03963-3
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Funding
- State Agency for Agriculture, Environment, and Rural Areas Schleswig-Holstein (LLUR)
- German Helmholtz-Association
- Projekt DEAL
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Seagrasses may play a role in reducing bacterial abundance in temperate regions, which helps in maintaining water quality and ecosystem functioning. However, the underlying mechanism is currently unclear and requires further study.
Seagrasses, a polyphyletic group of about 60 marine angiosperm species, are the foundation of diverse and functionally important marine habitats along sheltered sedimentary coasts. As a novel ecological function with high societal relevance, a role of the seagrass leaf canopy for reducing potentially harmful bacteria has recently been hypothesized in tropical regions, but data for temperate regions are lacking. Here, we tested whether or not the abundance of general bacteria and more specifically, those belonging to the genus Vibrio were reduced within temperate Zostera marina (eelgrass) meadows compared to adjacent sand flats and sampled 5 sites in the south-western Baltic Sea using SCUBA. Compared to non-vegetated area, we found an average reduction of 39% for all Vibrio and 63% for the potentially harmful V. vulnificus/cholerae subtype based on robust plate counting data on Vibrio selective agar. The underlying mechanism of the reduction in bacterial load is currently elusive and clearly merits further study. Our results underline the critical importance of seagrasses in maintaining shallow water ecosystem functioning including water quality and provide further motivation for their protection and restoration.
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