Publication:
Shallow waters as critical habitats for fish assemblages under eutrophication-mediated events in a coastal lagoon

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Authors
Zamora López, Antonio ; Guerrero Gómez, Adrián ; Torralva Forero, María del Mar ; Zamora Marín, José Manuel ; Guillén Beltrán, Antonio ; Oliva Paterna, Francisco José
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Publisher
Elsevier
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecss.2023.108447
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
Eutrophication is a major driver of the degradation of transitional waters worldwide, especially in environments with a restricted connection to the sea, such as coastal lagoons. In recent decades, intensive agriculture and urban water inputs around the Mar Menor coastal lagoon (Western Mediterranean) have disturbed this originally oligotrophic aquatic system. The nutrient input into the lagoon has triggered its eutrophication, leading to dystrophic crises and mass mortality events for aquatic biota, transforming it into one of the most eutrophication- impacted transitional waters in the Mediterranean basin. In this study, we applied a fish-based indicator to assess the ecological quality of shallow waters under different eutrophication-mediated environmental stress scenarios (from pre-eutrophic reference periods to critical eutrophic periods), as well as to explore the role of confinement (i.e., water renewal time) and shoreline anthropogenic pressure as factors modulating the indicator response. Despite the high magnitude of the eutrophication impact on the lagoon, the ecological quality of the shallow waters decreased only slightly after the mass mortality events. The level of confinement also had slight effects on the ecological quality of the most confined shallow areas in the summer during eutrophic periods. Hence, shallow waters could play a critical role as refuge habitats, both for fish assemblages and other aquatic taxa, by buffering euxinic conditions during eutrophication processes.”. In fact, shallow waters could act as critical habitats, allowing for the recolonisation of aquatic biota from more impacted areas in the lagoon. This attribute further reinforces the need to properly manage and protect the shoreline areas of transitional waters, particularly under eutrophication scenarios.
Citation
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 2023, Vol 291 : 108447
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