Mediation of macronutrients and carbon by post-disturbance shelf sea sediment communities

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Mediation of macronutrients and carbon by post-disturbance shelf sea sediment communities. / Hale, Rachel; Godbold, Jasmin; Sciberras, Marija et al.
In: Biogeochemistry, Vol. 135, No. 1-2, 09.2017, p. 121-133.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Hale, R, Godbold, J, Sciberras, M, Dwight, J, Wood, C, Hiddink, J & Solan, M 2017, 'Mediation of macronutrients and carbon by post-disturbance shelf sea sediment communities', Biogeochemistry, vol. 135, no. 1-2, pp. 121-133. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-017-0350-9

APA

Hale, R., Godbold, J., Sciberras, M., Dwight, J., Wood, C., Hiddink, J., & Solan, M. (2017). Mediation of macronutrients and carbon by post-disturbance shelf sea sediment communities. Biogeochemistry, 135(1-2), 121-133. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-017-0350-9

CBE

Hale R, Godbold J, Sciberras M, Dwight J, Wood C, Hiddink J, Solan M. 2017. Mediation of macronutrients and carbon by post-disturbance shelf sea sediment communities. Biogeochemistry. 135(1-2):121-133. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-017-0350-9

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Hale R, Godbold J, Sciberras M, Dwight J, Wood C, Hiddink J et al. Mediation of macronutrients and carbon by post-disturbance shelf sea sediment communities. Biogeochemistry. 2017 Sept;135(1-2):121-133. Epub 2017 Jun 12. doi: 10.1007/s10533-017-0350-9

Author

Hale, Rachel ; Godbold, Jasmin ; Sciberras, Marija et al. / Mediation of macronutrients and carbon by post-disturbance shelf sea sediment communities. In: Biogeochemistry. 2017 ; Vol. 135, No. 1-2. pp. 121-133.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Mediation of macronutrients and carbon by post-disturbance shelf sea sediment communities

AU - Hale, Rachel

AU - Godbold, Jasmin

AU - Sciberras, Marija

AU - Dwight, Jessica

AU - Wood, Christina

AU - Hiddink, Jan

AU - Solan, Martin

PY - 2017/9

Y1 - 2017/9

N2 - Benthic communities play a major role in organic matter remineralisation and the mediation of many aspects of shelf sea biogeochemistry. Few studies have considered how changes in community structure associated with different levels of physical disturbance affect sediment macronutrients and carbon following the cessation of disturbance. Here, we investigate how faunal activity (sediment particle reworking and bioirrigation) in communities that have survived contrasting levels of bottom fishing affect sediment organic carbon content and macronutrient concentrations ([NH4-N], [NO2-N], [NO3-N], [PO4-P], [SiO4-Si]). We find that organic carbon content and [NO3-N] decline in cohesive sediment communities that have experienced an increased frequency of fishing, whilst [NH4-N], [NO2-N], [PO4-P] and [SiO4-Si] are not affected. [NH4-N] increases in non-cohesive sediments that have experienced a higher frequency of fishing. Further analyses reveal that the way communities are restructured by physical disturbance differs between sediment type and with fishing frequency , but that changes in community structure do little to affect bioturbation and associated levels of organic carbon and nutrient concentrations. Our results suggest that in the presence of physical disturbance, irrespective of sediment type, the mediation of macronutrient and carbon cycling increasingly reflects the decoupling of organism-sediment relations. Indeed, it is the traits of species that reside at the sediment-water interface, or that occupy deeper parts of the sediment profile, that are disproportionately expressed post-disturbance, not necessarily the traits that are most important for sustaining biogeochemical functioning.

AB - Benthic communities play a major role in organic matter remineralisation and the mediation of many aspects of shelf sea biogeochemistry. Few studies have considered how changes in community structure associated with different levels of physical disturbance affect sediment macronutrients and carbon following the cessation of disturbance. Here, we investigate how faunal activity (sediment particle reworking and bioirrigation) in communities that have survived contrasting levels of bottom fishing affect sediment organic carbon content and macronutrient concentrations ([NH4-N], [NO2-N], [NO3-N], [PO4-P], [SiO4-Si]). We find that organic carbon content and [NO3-N] decline in cohesive sediment communities that have experienced an increased frequency of fishing, whilst [NH4-N], [NO2-N], [PO4-P] and [SiO4-Si] are not affected. [NH4-N] increases in non-cohesive sediments that have experienced a higher frequency of fishing. Further analyses reveal that the way communities are restructured by physical disturbance differs between sediment type and with fishing frequency , but that changes in community structure do little to affect bioturbation and associated levels of organic carbon and nutrient concentrations. Our results suggest that in the presence of physical disturbance, irrespective of sediment type, the mediation of macronutrient and carbon cycling increasingly reflects the decoupling of organism-sediment relations. Indeed, it is the traits of species that reside at the sediment-water interface, or that occupy deeper parts of the sediment profile, that are disproportionately expressed post-disturbance, not necessarily the traits that are most important for sustaining biogeochemical functioning.

U2 - 10.1007/s10533-017-0350-9

DO - 10.1007/s10533-017-0350-9

M3 - Article

VL - 135

SP - 121

EP - 133

JO - Biogeochemistry

JF - Biogeochemistry

SN - 0168-2563

IS - 1-2

ER -