| Literature DB >> 24832510 |
Abstract
In many European estuaries, extensive areas of intertidal habitats consist of bare mudflats and sandflats that harbour a very high abundance and biomass of macrobenthic invertebrates. The high stocks of macrobenthos in turn provide important food sources for the higher trophic levels such as fish and shorebirds. Climate change and associated sea-level rise will have potential to cause changes in coastal and estuarine physical properties in a number of ways and thereby influence the ecology of estuarine dependent organisms. Although the mechanisms involved in biological responses resulting from such environmental changes are complex, the ecological effects are likely to be significant for the estuarine benthic macrofauna and hence the consumers they support. This paper reviews the utilisation patterns of estuarine intertidal habitats by shorebirds, fish and crustaceans, as well as factors affecting the distribution, abundance and biomass of estuarine macrobenthos that is known to be important food source for these estuarine predators. This study also provides simple conceptual models of the likely impacts of sea-level rise on the physical and biological elements of estuarine intertidal habitats, and implications of these results are discussed in the context of sustainable long term flood and coastal management in estuarine environments.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24832510 PMCID: PMC4009809 DOI: 10.3390/biology1030597
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biology (Basel) ISSN: 2079-7737
Figure 1Conceptual representation of inter-relationships within/between broad environmental stressors induced by climate change and sea-level rise and spatio-temporal responses of estuarine intertidal macrobenthic biomass at the estuarine system scale. Stressors with respective pale green, orange and grey background represent environmental drivers which affect variability of macrobenthic biomass: (1) temporally (pale green); (2) spatially (orange); (3) both spatially and temporally (grey).
Figure 2Schematic representation of relations between estuarine intertidal macrobenthic biomass and key environmental factors with conceptual models illustrating possible shifts in the biomass distributions in response to sea-level rise: (a) along estuarine longitudinal gradient with biomass shift due to salinity intrusion upstream and change in particle size distributions resulting from sea-level rise; (b) along estuarine vertical gradient over intertidal flat with biomass shift due to change in intertidal beach profile. The black solid and dotted lines represent present and future distributions of macrobenthic biomass, respectively. In diagram (b), the blue dashed line indicates increased sea level and the brown dashed line represents newly established intertidal profile in response to sea-level rise. MHWL and MLWL represent mean high water level and mean low water level, respectively.