Abstract
Macrofauna can produce contrasting biogeochemical effects in intact and reconstructed sediments. We measured benthic fluxes of oxygen, inorganic carbon, and nitrogen and denitrification rates in intact sediments dominated by a filter and a deposit feeder and in reconstructed sediments added with increasing densities of the same organisms. Measurements in reconstructed sediments were carried out 5 days after macrofauna addition. The degree of stimulation of the measured fluxes in the intact and reconstructed sediments was then compared. Results confirmed that high densities of bioturbating macrofauna produce profound effects on sediment biogeochemistry, enhancing benthic respiration and ammonium recycling by up to a factor of ~3 and ~9, respectively, as compared to control sediments. The deposit feeder also increased total denitrification by a factor of ~2, whereas the filter feeder activity did not stimulate nitrogen removal. Moreover, the effects of deposit feeders on benthic fluxes were significantly higher (e.g., on respiration and ammonium recycling) or different (e.g., on denitrification) when measured in intact and reconstructed sediments. In intact sediments, deposit feeders enhanced the denitrification coupled to nitrification and had no effects on the denitrification of water column nitrate, whereas in reconstructed sediments, the opposite was true. This may reflect active burrowing in reconstructed sediments and the long time needed for slow growing nitrifiers to develop within burrows. Results suggest that, in bioturbation studies, oversimplified experimental approaches and insufficient preincubation time might lead to wrong interpretation of the role of macrofauna in sediment biogeochemistry, far from that occurring in nature.
Highlights
Bioturbation by macrofauna is a fascinating topic that has fueled a diversified body of scientific research [1,2,3,4,5,6]
Results of this study confirm the key role of bioturbating macrofauna in benthic biogeochemistry, with deposit feeders simulating the removal of nitrogen via denitrification and increasing the denitrification efficiency of the benthic system
Deposit feeders increase the rates of oxygen consumption, partly due to chemical or biological oxidation of anaerobic metabolism end products
Summary
Bioturbation by macrofauna is a fascinating topic that has fueled a diversified body of scientific research [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Macrofauna couple the pelagic and benthic environments in various ways. Feces and pseudofeces deposition by filter feeders, containing viable and active phytoplankton, displaces pelagic primary production at the sediment level [7,8]. Filter feeders activity, such as that of clams, may process the entire water column of shallow water bodies many times per day, assuring water transparency, increased light penetration, and benthic primary production [9,10,11]. Filter feeders excrete large amounts of the mineralized phytoplankton biomass back into the water column [12,13,14].
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have