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Mass Mortality in the Gulf of Trieste: The Course of Community Destruction
Author(s) -
Stachowitsch Michael
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
marine ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.668
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1439-0485
pISSN - 0173-9565
DOI - 10.1111/j.1439-0485.1984.tb00124.x
Subject(s) - benthic zone , shrimp , biomass (ecology) , coral , oceanography , mediterranean sea , biology , ecology , fishery , mediterranean climate , polychaete , geology
. Over a period of two weeks in September, 1983 a high biomass macroepifauna community characteristic of a greater part of the Gulf of Trieste suffered mass mortality. The affected area is estimated to cover several hundred km2. Within 2–3 days all sponges and the brittle star Ophiothrix quinquemaculata, which together make up over 60 % of the community biomass, were dead. Benthic fish, mostly gobiids, were already affected on the first day and littered the bottom in great numbers. Concurrently the complete spectrum of macroinfauna species including (in order of emergence) holothurians, burrowing shrimp, echinoids, polychaetes, sipunculids and bivalves appeared on the sediment surface. Within one week sea stars and all remaining ophiurids had died. At this time hermit crabs were found lying dead next to their shells. Several anemones survived into the last week, although many showed signs of severe stress and lay on the surface with exposed pedal discs. Oxygen deficiency is the apparent immediate cause of this phenomenon and several possible factors leading to anoxic conditions in the Gulf are discussed. This ecological catastrophy provides evidence that the affected community, considered to have achieved relative stability by developing a strategy effectively dampening the effect of physical oscillations, has a distinct tolerance limit to stress. The Gulf of Trieste, among the most productive areas in the Mediterranean Sea, must be considered as sensitive; September is a particularly critical month.

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