info:eu-repo/semantics/article
The intertidal benthic community of SW Atlantic as an environmental indicator of 50 years of human-mediated changes
Fecha
2019-10Registro en:
Llanos, Elizabeth Noemi; Jaubet, Maria Lourdes; Elias, Rodolfo; The intertidal benthic community of SW Atlantic as an environmental indicator of 50 years of human-mediated changes; Taylor & Francis As; Marine Biology Research; 15; 8-9; 10-2019; 458-475
1745-1000
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Llanos, Elizabeth Noemi
Jaubet, Maria Lourdes
Elias, Rodolfo
Resumen
The benthic communities dominated by the mussel Brachidontes rodriguezii (d’ Orbigny, 1846) are distributed in most of the rocky intertidal shores of temperate coastal areas of the SW Atlantic. The objective of this study was to review the changes that have placed in the intertidal zone of the mussel community over the past 50 years in Mar del Plata city (Buenos Aires Province, Argentina). From the original description (1966) of the community considered as a baseline, two anthropogenic agents were identified over time: (1) the introduction of non-indigenous species, and (2) the effect of the sewage pollution. Both agents impacted the benthic community, changing their vertical distribution, structure, and species composition. The belt barnacles formation in the upper intertidal zone and the reefs formed by the invader polychaete Boccardia proboscidea Hartman, 1940 were the main changes registered in the intertidal community. In the last 50 years, epilithic intertidal community results in a good indicator of anthropogenic pressures in the ecosystem of the SW Atlantic coastal area.