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Detecting the effects of physical disturbance on benthic assemblages in a subtropical estuary: A Beyond BACI approach
Authors:Greg A. Skilleter  Andrew Pryor  Samantha Miller  Bronwyn Cameron
Affiliation:Marine and Estuarine Ecology Unit, School of Integrative Biology, (8) University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, 4072, Australia
Abstract:The effects of dredging on the benthic communities in the Noosa River, a subtropical estuary in SE Queensland, Australia, were examined using a ‘Beyond BACI’ experimental design. Changes in the numbers and types of animals and characteristics of the sediments in response to dredging in the coarse sandy sediments near the mouth of the estuary were compared with those occurring naturally in two control regions. Samples were collected twice before and twice after the dredging operations, at multiple spatial scales, ranging from metres to kilometres. Significant effects from the dredging were detected on the abundance of some polychaetes and bivalves and two measures of diversity (numbers of polychaete families and total taxonomic richness). In addition, the dredging caused a significant increase in the diversity of sediment particle sizes found in the dredged region compared with elsewhere. Community composition in the dredged region was more similar to that in the control regions after dredging than before. Changes in the characteristics of the sedimentary environment as a result of the dredging appeared to lead to the benthic communities of the dredged region becoming more similar to those elsewhere in the estuary, so dredging in this system may have led to the loss or reduction in area of a specific type of habitat in the estuary with implications for overall patterns of biodiversity and ecosystem function.
Keywords:Benthic infauna   Beyond BACI   Disturbance   Dredging   SE Queensland   Subtropical estuary
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