INVESTIGADORES
MONTEMAYOR BORSINGER Diana Ireri
artículos
Título:
Effects of Spartina wrack on surface-active arthropod assemblage under different environmental contexts in Southwest Atlantic saltmarshes
Autor/es:
DIANA IRERI MONTEMAYOR; ALEJANDRO CANEPUCCIA; JUAN L. FARINA; MARIANA ADDINO; MACARENA S. VALIÑAS; OSCAR O. IRIBARNE
Revista:
ESTUARIES AND COASTS
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Lugar: Berlin; Año: 2019 vol. 42 p. 1104 - 1126
ISSN:
1559-2723
Resumen:
Large amounts of tidally accumulated detritus (i.e. wrack) are an important source of disturbance affecting different abiotic and biotic characteristics in saltmarshes, which could in turn affect the macrofauna assemblage. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the importance of wrack disturbance in Southwest Atlantic (SWA) saltmarshes and its effects on the surface-active arthropod assemblage under different environmental contexts. By sampling the most important SWA saltmarshes (from 36º 19?S to 41° 01?S), we found that wrack is a widespread disturbance in this region, present in all the saltmarshes and periods sampled. However, the biomass and type of wrack (Spartina alterniflora vs. S. densiflora) varies according to the species that dominates each saltmarsh. At two of these sites (Bahia Blanca (BB), 38º 59?S and San Clemente (SC), 36º 19?S), chosen because they represent the two saltmarsh types in the SWA region (dominated by Spartina alterniflora or S. densiflora), we performed a field experiment by manipulating the presence and absence of wrack and conducting field samplings of sediment organic matter content and water content. We found that wrack affects surface arthropod assemblage but that this effect was not consistent for the different saltmarshes: in BB it changed the surface-active arthropod assemblage (shifted towards more detritivorous taxa) and increased the number of total individuals, but had no effect on the number of species or diversity. At SC, wrack had no effect on any of the parameters evaluated. We suggest that the type of wrack in each saltmarsh modulates the amount of organic matter content in the sediment: BB had wrack of better nutritional quality (dominated by S. alterniflora) and in turn had greater organic matter content in the sediment of wrack zones than in no-wrack zones, while in SC (dominated by S. densiflora) there is no differences between the two zones. We also suggest that depending on the original surface-active arthropod assemblage, those modifications will either favor (BB) or not favor (SC) wrack colonization by the surface-active arthropod assemblage. Moreover, considering that SWA wrack has different composition and that the biomass differs among the different saltmarshes, we expect wrack effects in the SWA, and probably in other regions, to be site-specific.