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Long-term changes on estuarine ciliates linked with modifications on wind patterns and water turbidity.

Authors :
López-Abbate MC
Molinero JC
Perillo GME
Barría de Cao MS
Pettigrosso RE
Guinder VA
Uibrig R
Berasategui AA
Vitale A
Marcovecchio JE
Hoffmeyer MS
Source :
Marine environmental research [Mar Environ Res] 2019 Feb; Vol. 144, pp. 46-55. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Dec 07.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Planktonic ciliates constitute a fundamental component among microzooplankton and play a prominent role in carbon transport at the base of marine food webs. How these organisms respond to shifting environmental regimes is unclear and constitutes a current challenge under global ocean changes. Here we examine a multiannual field survey covering 25 years in the Bahía Blanca Estuary (Argentina), a shallow, flood-plain system dominated by wind and tidal energy. We found that the estuary experienced marked changes in wind dominant regimes and an increase in water turbidity driven from the joint effect of persistent long-fetch winds and the indirect effect of the Southern Annular Mode. Along with these changes, we found that zooplankton components, i.e. ciliates and the dominant estuarine copepod Acartia tonsa, showed a negative trend during the period 1986-2011. We showed that the combined effects of wind and turbidity with other environmental variables (chlorophyll, salinity and nutrients) consistently explained the variability of observed shifts. Tintinnids were more vulnerable to wind patterns and turbidity while showed a loss of synchrony with primary productivity. Water turbidity produced a dome-like pattern on tintinnids, oligotrichs and A. tonsa, implying that the highest abundance of organisms occurred under moderate values (∼50 NTU) of turbidity. In contrast, the response to wind patterns was not generalizable probably owing to species-specific traits. Observed trends denote that wind-induced processes in shallow ecosystems with internal sources of suspended sediments, are essential on ciliate dynamics and that such effects can propagate trough the interannual variability of copepods.<br /> (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1879-0291
Volume :
144
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Marine environmental research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30554905
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2018.12.001