Abstract

A quantitative analysis of meiofauna was carried out at ten sample stations distributed along a transect off Marseilles' (France) sewage outfall in November, 1981. The meiofauna was counted and average and total biomass of nematodes and copepods were calculated for each station. Comparison of data between stations or groups of stations was made using statistical tests. The results revealed three sectors in which effects of pollution on meiofauna differed: (1) A heavily polluted coastal zone (at a distance of 30 to 150 m from the outfall), relatively poor in meiofauna, which, however, was not completely absent-as were macrobenthic organisms; the meiofauna was composed mainly of nematodes and copepods, but acarians and naupliar larvae (probably copepods) were also numerous; the copepods were uncommonly large in size, and alone consituted most of the total benthic biomass in this zone. (2) An intermediate zone (400 to 1 150 m away from the coast), also polluted and much richer in meiofauna than the coastal zone; the meiofauna groups were more diversified, annelids (mainly polychaetes) increasing in number, while acarians became scarce and copepods decreased in size; at 400 m away from the outfall, where the sediment is strongly polluted, the nematode population consisted of large individuals which contributed greatly to the biomass; at 400 and 800 m, the distribution of both meiofauna and macrobenthos was heterogeneous; at 1 150 m away from the outfall, maximal meiofaunal densities were recorded, due primarily to an increase in nematode numbers; here, unlike all the stations nearer to the coast, total nematode biomass was greater than copepod biomass. (3) An off-shore zone (1.8 to 4 km distant from the coast), slightly polluted, where meiofauna densities were reduced and individuals decreased in size with increasing depth. Generally, an enrichment in the meiofauna was evident from the coastal to the intermediate zone. Enrichments induced by urban pollution have been recorded previously, but not, as in the present study, at a distance of 1 km away from the outfall, succeeding to a highly impoverished coastal zone. Thus, by supplying organic matter and nutrients, Marseilles' sewage can enrich sediments, but only to a certain distance away from the outfall, where the deleterious effects of pollutants are attenuated.

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