Abstract

The influence of sediment contaminated with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) on the meiobenthic copepod community of a Louisiana salt marsh was examined with microcosms of sediment containing natural faunal assemblages. Microcosms were dosed with PAH-contaminated sediment that ranged in concentration from 0.3 (controls) to 27 mg PAH/kg dry sediment, and effects were followed for 28 days. Data suggest that highest doses (High-PAH) elicited avoidance behavior by Pseudostenhelia wellsi (Coull and Fleeger) copepods and nauplii, particularly 12 h after contaminants were added (Day 0). Weaker avoidance behavior was indicated in non- P. wellsi species that was manifested as increases in nauplius copepod ratios. Nematode copepod ratios were calculated for each of 4 species ( P. wellsi, Coullana sp., Enhydrosoma sp., and Onychoeamptus mohammed (Blanchard and Richard)); only nematode/ P. wellsi ratios were significantly affected by PAH. High-PAH treatments also lead to a higher proportion of females in P. wellsi and Coullana sp. This effect was only observed from Day 7 on and is interpreted as an indication of disproportionately high mortality of males. Collectively, our data demonstrate that relatively low-level PAH contamination may cause many ecologically important impacts on copepod community structure that may not be detected at the level of higher taxon.

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