Title of article
Water quality in the Great Barrier Reef region: responses of mangrove, seagrass and macroalgal communities
Author/Authors
Britta Schaffelke، نويسنده , , Jane Mellors، نويسنده , , Norman C. Duke، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
18
From page
279
To page
296
Abstract
Marine plants colonise several interconnected ecosystems in the Great Barrier Reef region including tidal wetlands, seagrass meadows and coral reefs. Water quality in some coastal areas is declining from human activities. Losses of mangrove and other tidal wetland communities are mostly the result of reclamation for coastal development of estuaries, e.g. for residential use, port infrastructure or marina development, and result in river bank destabilisation, deterioration of water clarity and loss of key coastal marine habitat. Coastal seagrass meadows are characterized by small ephemeral species. They are disturbed by increased turbidity after extreme flood events, but generally recover. There is no evidence of an overall seagrass decline or expansion. High nutrient and substrate availability and low grazing pressure on nearshore reefs have lead to changed benthic communities with high macroalgal abundance. Conservation and management of GBR macrophytes and their ecosystems is hampered by scarce ecological knowledge across macrophyte community types.
Keywords
herbicides , Mangroves , Seagrass , Pollution , nutrients , macroalgae
Journal title
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Record number
1295632
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