This thesis uses a range of different size spectra to compare contrasting benthic habitats in
the aquatic realm. Temporal and spatial variation in benthic size spectra were investigated
across a full salinity gradient (i.e. from freshwater, through estuarine to marine) in the
River Yealm, south Devon, in order to gauge the influence of large differences in
taxonomy and evolutionary history. Abundance and biomass size spectra showed a similar
pattern among sites in all seasons but winter, suggesting that the size structure of benthic
communities may be similar in sites with very different community compositions. A
subsequent study comparing size spectra across salinity by employing artificial substrata
suggested that substratum type also had little effect on the size structure of these benthic
communities. A technique was developed for obtaining microbial size distributions for
benthic communities and showed that microbial size structures were also similar between
the marine and freshwater sites within the Yealm system. A final study demonstrated that
the shape of size spectra was clearly affected by metal contamination. Size spectra across a
salinity gradient -(i.e. from freshwater to lower estuary) in the highly contaminated Fal
system were very different to those in the uncontaminated Yealm, due mostly to the low
macrofaunal abundance in the former.
This thesis is the first to assess patterns in benthic size spectra across a full salinity range in
the same system. It is hoped that it will provide a base line for further studies in this
exciting research area in macroecology and that biomass spectra might also prove useful as
metrics for biomonitoring.
Date of Award | 2000 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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FROM RIVERS TO OCEANS: A COMPARISON OF CONTRASTING AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS USING BENTHIC SIZE SPECTRA
ABADA, A. E. A. (Author). 2000
Student thesis: PhD