학술논문

Fouling communities associated to artificial substrates (pine-wood) under environmental stress conditions in Lake de Maracaibo, Venezuela
Document Type
Conference
Source
OCEANS 96 MTS/IEEE Conference Proceedings. The Coastal Ocean - Prospects for the 21st Century Oceans 96 OCEANS '96. MTS/IEEE. Prospects for the 21st Century. Conference Proceedings. 3:1447-1450 vol.3 1996
Subject
Geoscience
Signal Processing and Analysis
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Robotics and Control Systems
Aerospace
Stress
Organisms
Lakes
Petrochemicals
Water conservation
Chemical industry
Laboratories
Condition monitoring
Algae
Effluents
Language
Abstract
The use of artificial substrates to evaluate the faunistic composition of natural environments is a common technique employed to monitor fouling organisms in aquatic habitats. This technique allows one to see the chronological changes in diversity and abundance. With the objective to study the variation of this kind of fauna in an estuarine mangrove altered by alterations industrial and petrochemical wastes, a six-month monitoring program (May-October 1993) was performed at four stations with different degrees of perturbation and also different ecological conditions. New pine wood collectors of 20/spl times/8/spl times/1.5 cm were put and taken monthly at each station, one of them cleaned of fouling fauna and dissected looking for boring organisms. Another set of collectors (6) were put in each station along the whole period of study. The fauna composition, chronological changes and the effect of predation was studied. This fauna was analyzed qualitative and quantitatively searching for the lowest taxonomic identifications. A total of seven groups (Bivalvia, Gastropoda, Decapoda, Cirripedia, Annelida, Amphipoda, Isopoda and Platyhelmintha) were present at all stations and through time during the six month monitoring period. The most abundant species were Mytella maracaiboensis, Neritina reclivata, Psiloteredo healdi, Ritropanopeo harrisii, Balanus amphititre, Nereris sp. and Anopsilana crenata. The first colonizers were cirriped larvae, mollusks larvae, mainly teredinids and filamentous algae. This last group was in many occasions the only one present. Cirripedia and boring organisms were the most important component in all four stations because of their abundance, cover and sensibility to stressing factors. This was noted by changes in their behavior when facing industrial effluents. Perturbation was more evident in sessile organisms whose larval stages were adversely affected by daily pH and salinity oscillations. Daily changes were due to variation in the amount of waste discharge and tides. Other taxa responded more to other biotic factors such as predation by fishes.