A muddy-sand site in the North Sea was studied to identify the role of the benthic
macrofauna in the resuspension of sediment. The macrobenthic community contained
species capable of significant bioturbation. In particular, the presence and the temporal
occurrence of the brittle star Amphiura filiformis was correlated with seasonal
geotechnical and geophysical properties of the seabed. In addition, the extensive
burrowing habit of the mud shrimp, Callianassa subterranea (Montagu), make this
species potentially the most important contributor to the degree of bioturbation
experienced at the site. Mud shrimps were an abundant and stable member of the study
site's macrobenthic community [mean= 11.4 indiv./0.25m²(1SD±2.1)]. The sexually
dichotomous individuals live between 2-3 years, and reproduction and recruitment
primarily occurred in the summer (though an additional late winter/early spring period
was hypothesised). Resin casting of burrows constructed by C. subterranea in the
laboratory revealed a consistent morphological pattern with particular size- and sex-specific
details of dimension and design. Mud shrimps, recovered from the site, were
returned to the laboratory to investigate the influence of body size and temperature upon
the amount of sediment expelled. A clear relationship between these variables and the
quantity of expelled sediment was identified, and a well-defined temporal pattern of
expulsion activity and inactivity was demonstrated. These experimental data, together
with field information on seawater temperatures and mud shrimp population dynamics
from the site, allow the construction of an annual sediment turnover budget [11
kg(dry)/m²/yr] with a confidence to date unrealised. Field observations at the North Sea
site show that the sediment expelled by the mud shrimp occasionally forms a multitude
of unconsolidated volcano-like mounds, which significantly modify seabed surface
topography. The dimensions of these surface features were measured from bottom
photographs and used to determine values of boundary roughness length (Zo) for the site
(eg, September Zo= 0.79cm). The mud shrimps' contribution to resuspension was
estimated by calculating the derived lateral sediment transport rate of 7 kg/m/month
(from values of the site's near-bed current velocity, modified boundary roughness length
and predicted sediment turnover rates). The links between sediment resuspension and the
fluxes of trace metals, carbon and nutrients established by associated studies, demand
that the bioturbatory activities of Callianassa subterranea must be included in any
discusssion of the fate of contaminants and the future modelling of associated water
quality in the North Sea.
Date of Award | 1993 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Awarding Institution | |
---|
The burrowing mud shrimp Callianassa subterranea (Decapoda) and bioturbation in the North Sea
Rowden, A. A. (Author). 1993
Student thesis: PhD