info:eu-repo/semantics/article
The boom-bust dynamic of the invader Boccardia proboscidea mediated by sewage discharge: The response of the intertidal epilithic community in the Southwest Atlantic
Fecha
2021-03Registro en:
Llanos, Elizabeth Noemi; Saracho Bottero, Maria Andrea; Jaubet, Maria Lourdes; Garaffo, Griselda Valeria; Hines, Emiliano; et al.; The boom-bust dynamic of the invader Boccardia proboscidea mediated by sewage discharge: The response of the intertidal epilithic community in the Southwest Atlantic; Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd; Marine Pollution Bulletin; 164; 3-2021; 1-9
0025-326X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Llanos, Elizabeth Noemi
Saracho Bottero, Maria Andrea
Jaubet, Maria Lourdes
Garaffo, Griselda Valeria
Hines, Emiliano
Cuello, Graciela Veronica
Elias, Rodolfo
Resumen
Biological invasions produce an invader population boom but are often followed by an invader population bust. The decrease of the invader abundance ends with the coexistence of native species and the invader or with repeated boom and bust events. In the southwest Atlantic, the polychaete Boccardia proboscidea invaded the coasts influenced by sewage discharge. We studied the change in the intertidal benthic community during the boom-bust dynamic of the Bo. proboscidea invasion. During the boom, the invader polychaete was dominant forming monoculture reefs. Species richness, diversity, and evenness indices decrease in the boom phase. During the bust of the Bo.proboscidea invasion, the decrease of organic matter allowed Br. rodriguezii to coexist with Bo. proboscidea. Beta diversity comparing boom with the bust phase showed a greater nesting (nestedness component); reflecting a process of species loss. We found that both boom and bust phases of the polychaete Bo. proboscidea invasion were mediated by sewage.