Title of article :
Sediment dynamics modulated by burrowing crab activities in contrasting SW Atlantic intertidal habitats
Author/Authors :
Mauricio Escapa، نويسنده , , Gerardo M.E. Perillo، نويسنده , , Oscar Iribarne، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Biogenic bottom features, animal burrows and biological activities interact with the hydrodynamics of
the sediment–water interface to produce altered patterns of sediment erosion, transport and deposition
which have consequences for large-scale geomorphologic features. It has been suggested that depending
on the hydrodynamic status of the habitat, the biological activity on the bottom may have a variety of
effects. In some cases, different bioturbation activities by the same organism can result in different
consequences. The burrowing crab Neohelice granulata is the most important bioturbator at SW Atlantic
saltmarshes and tidal plains. Because of the great variety of habitats that this species may inhabit, it is
possible to compare its bioturbation effects between zones dominated by different hydrodynamic
conditions. Internal marsh microhabitats, tidal creeks bottoms and basins, and open mudflats were
selected as contrasting zones for the comparison on a large saltmarsh at Bahı´a Blanca Estuary (Argentina).
Crab burrows act as passive traps of sediment in all zones, because their entrances remain open
during inundation periods at high tide. Mounds are generated when crabs remove sediments from the
burrows to the surface and become distinctive features in all the zones. Two different mechanisms of
sediment transport utilizing mounds as sediment sources were registered. In the first one, parts of fresh
mound sediments were transported when exposed to water flow during flooding and ebbing tide, with
higher mound erosion where currents were higher as compared to internal marsh habitats and open
mudflats. In the second mechanism, mounds exposed to atmospheric influence during low tide became
desiccated and cracked forming ellipsoidal blocks, which were then transported by currents in zones of
intense water flow in the saltmarsh edge. Sedimentary dynamics varied between zones; crabs were
promoting trapping of sediments in the internal saltmarsh (380 g m 2 day 1) and open mudflats
(1.2 kg m 2 day 1), but were enhancing sediment removal in the saltmarsh edge (between 10 and
500 g m 2 day 1 in summer). The implication is that biologically mediated sedimentological changes
could be different among microhabitats, potentially leading to contrasting geomorphologic effects within
a particular ecosystem.
Keywords :
bioturbationsedimentationmud flatssaltmarshesNeohelice granulataBah?´a Blanca
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science