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06/19/2020 10:00

Our "top athletes" on the seafloor: Hediste diversicolor, Arctica islandica, Echinocardium cordatum, Amphiura filiformis

Dr. Barbara Hentzsch Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Leibniz-Institut für Ostseeforschung Warnemünde

    A comparative study in four sea regions (German Baltic Sea, German North Sea, Belgian part of the North Sea and Eastern Channel) identified the organisms behind these Latin names as the most important actors in wide areas of the North Sea and the Baltic Sea in terms of bioturbation. They ensure that the bottom is supplied with oxygen, which triggers a chain of other vital processes. In different environments, only the ranking within this group changes. An international team led by the Warnemünde biologists Mayya Gogina and Michael Zettler now published the results. Using maps of the bioturbation potential, they defined areas of high ecosystem service particularly worthy of protection.

    Bioturbation - the mixing of substrate by organisms - is one of the key processes in seabed habitats. It leads to an intensive interaction between the water column and the bottom, in the course of which oxygen can enter the sediment. What sounds so simple launches a whole chain of other vital processes: chemical compounds change, bacterial activities are triggered. Because of the manifold importance for the ecosystem, it is of great ecological interest to avoid any impairment of this service by human use activities. Previous studies on bioturbation were limited to individual sites, the findings of which were then transferred to larger areas. Regional differences in environmental conditions were left unaccounted - understandable in view of the high effort required for bioturbation analyses. With this multi-regional analysis, the marine biologists Mayya Gogina and Michael L. Zettler from the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (IOW), together with an international team of authors, have for the first time used the bioturbation potential (BPc), a functional indicator for the bioturbation of bottom-living communities, to conclude area-wide assessments that take into account regional characteristics.

    Based on macrofaunal data from four sea areas (German Baltic Sea, German North Sea, Belgian part of the North Sea and Eastern Channel) key species for BPc were identified for each region and sediment type. With the help of existing environmental data, this information enabled statements on the areal distribution of the key species. In this way, the regions could be easily compared with each other and the causes of possible differences could be identified.

    The multi-regional analysis made it possible to identify regional differences in the performance of macrofauna. "We see very clearly from these analyses that it is important to develop conservation and management strategies specifically for each sea area," Mayya Gogina explains one of the conclusions of the study. "The main actors of bioturbation and its relevance for ecosystem services depend on the biotic and abiotic conditions of the environment. This should be considered when identifying the so-called hotspots of ecosystem functions in order to protect them".

    So who is behind these pompous Latin names? They are the iridescent sea annelid (Hediste diversicolor), the common heart sea urchin (Echinocardium cordatum), the Icelandic clam (Arctica islandica) and the brittle star (Amphiura filiformis).


    Contact for scientific information:

    Dr. Mayya Gogina | Tel.: +49 (0)381 5197 393 | mayya.gogina@io-warnemuende.de
    Dr. Michael L. Zettler | Tel.: +49 (0)381 5197 236 | michael.zettler@io-warnemuende.de


    Original publication:

    Gogina, M., M. L. Zettler, J. Vanaverbeke, J. Dannheim, G. Van Hoey, N. Desroy, A. Wrede, H. Reiss, S. Degraer, V. Van Lancker, A. Foveau, U. Braeckman, D. Fiorentino, J. Holstein and S. N. R. Birchenough (2020). Interregional comparison of benthic ecosystem functioning: Community bioturbation potential in four regions along the NE Atlantic shelf. Ecol. Indic. 110: 105945, doi: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2019.105945


    Images

    Mayya Gogina during a sampling campaign with Arctica islandica
    Mayya Gogina during a sampling campaign with Arctica islandica
    IOW
    IOW

    The Icelandic clam - Arctica islandica
    The Icelandic clam - Arctica islandica
    IOW
    IOW


    Criteria of this press release:
    Business and commerce, Journalists, Scientists and scholars
    Biology, Environment / ecology, Geosciences, Oceanology / climate
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific Publications
    English


     

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