| Literature DB >> 18590001 |
Laurent Godet1, Jérôme Fournier, Marieke M van Katwijk, Frédéric Olivier, Patrick Le Mao, Christian Retière.
Abstract
We examined the original manuscripts of a French national survey conducted in 1933 on the state of common eelgrass Zostera marina beds along the French Atlantic coasts during the period when wasting disease struck the entire North Atlantic population in the 1930s. Based on GIS related techniques and old sets of aerial photographs, we present the first accurate mapping of the Z. marina beds before wasting disease occurred and assess their spatial recolonization since the 1950s in the Chausey Archipelago (France), which contains large Z. marina beds. The national survey confirmed that the Z. marina beds almost totally disappeared from the French coasts during the 1930s. However, the disease symptoms seem to have begun locally a few years before. On the study site, we found that the Z. marina beds were more than twice as extended than as they are today, and covered both subtidal and intertidal areas. By the 1950s, 20 yr after the onset of the disease, the beds had hardly recolonized, and contrary to the recolonization patterns reported elsewhere in Europe, they were mainly restricted to subtidal areas. The subtidal and intertidal Z. marina beds on the site are now rapidly expanding.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18590001 DOI: 10.3354/dao01897
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dis Aquat Organ ISSN: 0177-5103 Impact factor: 1.802