Abstract

Controversy exists on the utility of the nematode-copepod ratio as a method for assessing the effects of pollution on benthic communities. In a test of this ratio along a known gradient of organic enrichment in Oslofjord, the index showed the same trends as a previously undertaken macrofaunal survey. Copepod numbers decreased and nematode numbers increased along the gradient of increasing organic enrichment giving rise to changes in the ratio. Grain-size parameters showed no correlation with the ratio. Copepod numbers, however, showed a significant negative correlation with oxygen concentration 1 m above the sediment. The nematode-copepod ratio is suggested as being an acceptable addition to a suite of techniques for the assessment of organic enrichment effects on benthic communities, but does require special expertise. A decrease in the numbers of meiofaunal taxa along the organic enrichment gradent was found and is similar to the gradient in the nematode-copepod ratio. The fact that all indices show responses in Oslofjord may merely reflect the strong organic enrichment gradient that exists; it should not necessarily be construed that such results will be found everywhere.

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