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Human Influence at the Coast: Upland and Shoreline Stressors Affect Coastal Macrofauna and Are Mediated by Salinity

Anthropogenic Stressors can affect subtidal communities within the land-water interface. Increasing anthropogenic activities, including upland and shoreline development, threaten ecologically important species in these habitats. In this study, we examined the consequences of anthropogenic Stressors...

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Published in:Estuaries and coasts 2018-09, Vol.41 (Suppl 1), p.S114-S130
Main Authors: Seitz, Rochelle D., Knick, Kathleen E., Davenport, Theresa M., Saluta, Gabrielle G.
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description Anthropogenic Stressors can affect subtidal communities within the land-water interface. Increasing anthropogenic activities, including upland and shoreline development, threaten ecologically important species in these habitats. In this study, we examined the consequences of anthropogenic Stressors on benthic macrofaunal communities in 14 subestuaries of Chesapeake Bay. We investigated how subestuary upland use (forested, agricultural, developed land) and shoreline development (riprap and bulkhead compared to marsh and beach) affected density, biomass, and diversity of benthic infauna. Upland and shoreline development were parameters included in the most plausible models among a candidate set compared using corrected Akaike's Information Criterion. For benthic macrofauna, density tended to be lower in subestuaries with developed or mixed compared to forested or agricultural upland use. Benthic biomass was significantly lower in subestuaries with developed compared to forested upland use, and biomass declined exponentially with proportion of near-shore developed land. Benthic density did not differ significantly among natural marsh, beach, and riprap habitats, but tended to be lower adjacent to bulkhead shorelines. Including all subestuaries, there were no differences in diversity by shoreline type. In low salinities, benthic Shannon (H′) diversity tended to be higher adjacent to natural marshes compared to the other habitats, and lower adjacent to bulkheads, but the pattern was reversed in high salinities. Sediment characteristics varied by shoreline type and contributed to differences in benthic community structure. Given the changes in the infaunal community with anthropogenic Stressors, subestuary upland and shoreline development should be minimized to increase benthic production and subsequent trophic transfer within the food web.
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identifier ISSN: 1559-2723
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source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; Springer Nature
subjects Agricultural land
Anthropogenic factors
Beaches
Benthic infauna
Biomass
Bulkheads
Coastal Sciences
Coastal zone management
Coasts
Communities
Community structure
Density
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecological monitoring
Ecology
Environment
Environmental Management
Food chains
Food webs
Freshwater & Marine Ecology
Habitats
Human influences
Macrofauna
Marshes
Meiobenthos
Mud-water interfaces
Riprap
Salinity
Shorelines
Water and Health
Zoobenthos
title Human Influence at the Coast: Upland and Shoreline Stressors Affect Coastal Macrofauna and Are Mediated by Salinity
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