INVESTIGADORES
BRUSCHETTI Carlos Martin
artículos
Título:
The contribution of crab burrow excavation to carbon availability in surficial salt-marsh sediments
Autor/es:
GUTIERREZ, J,L; JONES, C.; GROFFMAN, P.M; FINDLAY, S.E.; IRIBARNE, O.O; RIBEIRO, P.; BRUSCHETTI, M.
Revista:
ECOSYSTEMS (NEW YORK. PRINT)
Referencias:
Año: 2006 vol. 9 p. 647 - 658
ISSN:
1432-9840
Resumen:
Geomorphology, vegetation and tidal fluxes are usually identified as the factors introducing variation in the flushing of particulate organic matter (POM) from tidal marshes to adjacent waters. Such variables may, however, be insufficient to explain export characteristics in marshes inhabited by ecosystem engineers that can alter the quantity and quality of POM on the marsh surface that is subject to tidal flushing. In this study we evaluated the balance between transfer of buried sedimentary organic carbon (C) to the marsh surface due to crab excavation (measured from the mounds of sediment excavated from burrows) and outputs of C from the surface due to sediment deposition within crab burrows (estimated from sediment deposited within PVC burrow mimics), in a Southwestern Atlantic salt marsh supporting dense (approximately 70 ind m-2) populations of the crab Chasmagnathus granulatus. C excavation by crabs was much greater than deposition of C within crab burrow mimics. Per area unit estimates of the balance between these two processes indicated that crabs excavated 5.98 g m)2 d)1 and 4.80 mg m)2 d)1 of total and readily (10 d) labile C, respectively. However, sediments excavated by crabs showed a significantly lower content of both total and readily-labile C than sediment collected in burrow mimics. This indicates that ecosystem engineering by burrowing crabs causes a net decrease in the concentration of C in the superficial sediment layers and, thus, an overall decrease in the amount of C that can be washed out of the marsh by tidal action. Incorporating the in situ activities of ecosystem engineers in models of marsh export should enhance understanding of the function of marshes in estuarine ecosystems.