Title of article :
Colonization, succession, and nutrition of macrobenthic assemblages in a restored wetland at Tijuana Estuary, California
Author/Authors :
Serena M. Moseman، نويسنده , , Lisa A. Levin، نويسنده , , Carolyn Currin، نويسنده , , Charlotte Forder، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Modes of colonization, the successional trajectory, and trophic recovery of a macrofaunal community were analyzed over 19
months in the Friendship marsh, a 20-acre restored wetland in Tijuana Estuary, California. Traditional techniques for quantifying
macrofaunal communities were combined with emerging stable isotopic approaches for evaluation of trophic recovery, making
comparisons with a nearby natural Spartina foliosa habitat. Life history-based predictions successfully identified major colonization
modes, although most taxa employed a variety of tactics for colonizing the restored marsh. The presence of S. foliosa did not seem to
affect macrofaunal colonization or succession at the scale of this study. However, soil organic matter content in the restored marsh
was positively correlated with insect densities, and high initial salinities may have limited the success of early colonists. Total
macrofaunal densities recovered to natural marsh levels after 14 months and diversity, measured as species richness and the Shannon
index (H#), was comparable to the natural marsh by 19 months. Some compositional disparities between the natural and created
communities persisted after 19 months, including lower percentages of surface-feeding polychaetes (Polydora spp.) and higher
percentages of dipteran insects and turbellarians in the Friendship marsh. As surficial structural similarity of infaunal communities
between the Friendship and natural habitat was achieved, isotopic analyses revealed a simultaneous trajectory towards recovery of
trophic structure. Enriched d13C signatures of benthic microalgae and infauna, observed in the restored marsh shortly after
establishment compared to natural Spartina habitat, recovered after 19 months. However, the depletion in d15N signatures of
macrofauna in the Friendship marsh indicated consumption of microalgae, particularly nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria, while
macroalgae and Spartina made a larger contribution to macrofaunal diets in the natural habitat. Future successional studies must
continue to develop and employ novel combinations of techniques for evaluating structural and functional recovery of disturbed and
created habitats.
Keywords :
succession , colonization , salt marsh , Isotope ratio , California coast , Insecta , Polychaeta , infauna
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science