4.7 Article

Mollusk death assemblages in 210Pb-dated marine sediment cores reveal recent biotic changes in the Gulf of Guanahacabibes, NW Cuba

Journal

MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 171, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2021.105477

Keywords

Benthic ecology; Biodiversity; Seagrass; mollusks; Trophic guild; Gulf of Mexico; Pb-210 dating; C-14 dating

Funding

  1. Ocean Foundation
  2. Dalio Family Foundation
  3. University of Florida Land Use and Environmental Change Institute

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The study investigated mollusk death assemblages and geochemistry in sediment cores from seagrass beds and an unvegetated site in the Gulf of Guanahacabibes, NW Cuba. The transition from mangrove to seagrass beds was associated with sea level rise 6000 years ago. Higher sediment accumulation rates in the past century, particularly after 1980, were likely influenced by human activities. The study showed high mollusk diversity in the Gulf of Guanahacabibes, with inter-site differences in grain size, vegetation cover, and nutrient input driving beta-diversity.
We investigated stratigraphic changes in mollusk death assemblages and geochemistry in sediment cores from four seagrass beds and one unvegetated site in the Gulf of Guanahacabibes (GG), NW Cuba. There was a transition from mangrove to seagrass beds, associated with sea level rise-6000 years ago. Sediment accumulation rates during the last century showed a general rise, but increased sharply after-1980, likely because of human activities. The GG displayed overall high mollusk gamma-diversity, and our estimate of 189 species is biased toward the low end. High beta-diversity was driven by inter-site differences in grain size, vegetation cover, and nutrient input. Spatial heterogeneity within the basin influenced downcore abundance and diversity metrics, highlighting the influence of local drivers. Herbivorous gastropods dominated in seagrass beds and suspension feeder bivalves were dominant on sandy bottom. In the top parts of cores, species richness declined at two sites that were subject to high, human-mediated bulk sedimentation rates and eutrophication. Conservation measures are needed to preserve this hotspot of marine diversity.

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