Title of article :
Food webs of two intermittently open estuaries receiving 15N-enriched sewage effluent
Author/Authors :
Wade L. Hadwen، نويسنده , , Angela H. Arthington، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Carbon and nitrogen stable isotope signatures were used to assess the response of food webs to sewage effluent discharged into two small
intermittently open estuaries in northern New South Wales, Australia. One of these systems, Tallows Creek, has a history of direct sewage inputs,
whilst the other, Belongil Creek, receives wastewater via an extensive wetland treatment system. The food webs of both systems were driven by
algal sources of carbon, reflecting high autotrophic productivity in response to the nutrients entering the system from sewage effluent. All aquatic
biota collected from Tallows Creek had significantly enriched d15N signatures relative to their conspecifics from Belongil Creek, indicating that
sewage nitrogen had been assimilated and transferred throughout the Tallows Creek food web. These d15N values were higher than those reported
from studies in permanently open estuaries receiving sewage effluent. We suggest that these enriched signatures and the transfer of nitrogen
throughout the entire food web reflect differences in hydrology and associated nitrogen cycling processes between permanently open and intermittently
open estuaries. Although all organisms in Tallows Creek were generally 15N-enriched, isotopically light (less 15N-enriched) individuals
of estuary perchlet (Ambassis marianus) and sea mullet (Mugil cephalus) were also collected. These individuals were most likely recent immigrants
into Tallows Creek, as this system had only recently been opened to the ocean. This isotopic discrimination between resident (enriched)
and immigrant (significantly less enriched) individuals can provide information on fish movement patterns and the role of heavily polluted
intermittently open estuaries in supporting commercially and recreationally valuable estuarine species
Keywords :
stable isotopes , Carbon , 15N-enriched , Trophic transfer , estuarine ecology , Australia , New South Wales , Byron Bay , nitrogen
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science