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1.
Mar Environ Res ; 160: 104981, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32907719

ABSTRACT

Canopy-forming macroalgae recently experienced a worldwide decline. This is relevant, because canopies sustain complex food webs in temperate coasts. We assessed the die-back of the canopy-forming alga Fucus serratus in N Spain, at its warm distributional range boundary, and its effects on associated assemblages. We combined long-term descriptive surveys with canopy-removal experiments. Results showed that rapid shifts to turf-forming communities were mostly the direct consequence of the canopy loss, rather than a concurrent process directly triggered by climate change. The switch alters the whole food web, as the prominent role of F.serratus and other cold-temperate intertidal fucoids is not being replaced by functionally equivalent species. Canopy loss caused a rapid biotic homogenization at regional scale which is spreading towards the west, from the edge to the central part of the former distributional range of F.serratus in N Spain. The most obvious effect is the ecological and functional impoverishment of the coastal system.


Subject(s)
Fucus , Seaweed , Food Chain , Plants , Spain , Surveys and Questionnaires
2.
Mar Pollut Bull ; 56(6): 1192-200, 2008 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18353402

ABSTRACT

An assessment of the effects of the 'Prestige' oil spill on intertidal, macroalgal assemblages was carried out comparing abundance data obtained before and after the spill. Four zones in the North and Northwest coast of Spain were sampled, one of them located at the immediate vicinity of the spill, the zone most heavily oiled. Macroalgal assemblages had similar structure between years. Neither critical decrease in abundance of the dominant macroalgae, nor increase in opportunistic species were found. Some differences in abundance were observed, but they did not show any pattern, being more likely the result of the natural variability of the assemblage. Extensive, but not intense fuel deposition on the shores and a limited use of aggressive cleanup methods are suggested as possible causes for the lack of the effects in these assemblages after the 'Prestige' oil spill.


Subject(s)
Disasters , Ecosystem , Eukaryota/drug effects , Fuel Oils/adverse effects , Seawater/chemistry , Atlantic Ocean , Ships , Spain , Water Pollutants, Chemical/adverse effects
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