Meiofaunal colonisation on artificial substrates: a tool for biomonitoring the environmental quality on coastal marine systems
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2004
abstract:
The use of artificial substrates for monitoring environmental quality and contaminant impact has been repeatedly suggested, but
little information is yet available on the applicability and the sensitivity of this approach. One of the crucial points to be addressed
for using artificial substrates, as tools mirroring actual benthic community state, is assessing whether, and how, they reflect in situ
conditions characterising natural sediments. In this study we investigated short-term dynamics of meiofaunal colonisation on
artificial substrates (bottle brushes) deployed in impacted and ''pristine'' (control) sites. Meiofaunal colonisation reached a threshold
level after 4-6 days in both impacted and control sites but with significantly higher densities in artificial substrates deployed in the
control site. Meiofaunal parameters in artificial substrates reflected those of meiofaunal assemblages inhabiting natural sediments
where artificial substrates were deployed. Colonised artificial substrates were then transplanted from impacted to control sites. This
caused a significant increase of meiofaunal abundance, which after 5 days reached values indistinguishable from the non-impacted
control. Given the rapid colonisation time, meiofaunal sensitivity to changing environmental conditions, it can be concluded that
artificial substrates can represent an useful tool to be further developed for routine and low-cost monitoring studies aiming at
integrating biological indicators of environmental quality.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Environmental quality; Biomonitoring; Meiofauna; Hydrocarbons; Artificial substrates
List of contributors:
Mirto, Simone
Published in: