Environmental drivers modelling the mangrove Kinorhyncha community along an urban-to-natural gradient in French Guiana (western Atlantic Ocean)

Type Article
Date 2024-03
Language English
Author(s) Cepeda Diego1, 2, Sánchez Nuria3, Spedicato Adriana4, Michaud Emma4, Zeppilli DanielaORCID1
Affiliation(s) 1 : Univ. Brest, CNRS, Ifremer, UMR6197 Biologie et Ecologie des Ecosystèmes marins Profonds, Plouzané, France
2 : Autonomous University of Madrid (UAM), Faculty of Sciences, Department of Biology, Centre for Research on Biodiversity and Global Change (CIBC-UAM), Madrid, Spain
3 : Department of Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolution (BEE), Faculty of Biological Sciences, Complutense University of Madrid (UCM), Madrid, Spain
4 : Univ. Brest, CNRS, IRD, IFREMER, LEMAR, Plouzané, France
Source Frontiers In Marine Science (2296-7745) (Frontiers Media SA), 2024-03 , Vol. 11 , P. 1342763 (8p.)
DOI 10.3389/fmars.2024.1342763
Keyword(s) mud dragons, meiofauna, pollution, trace metals, sediment grain size, mangrove forests, benthic habitat, anthropogenic pressure
Abstract

Meiofaunal communities are dominated by free-living nematodes and harpacticoid copepods. Most of the studies defining the environmental drivers that influence meiofauna focus on these profuse groups. The ‘rare’ meiofaunal organisms (densities <5%) are frequently overlooked, making it difficult to know which abiotic variables influence their populations, or their ecological role in the benthic ecosystems. In this study, we explore the ecological factors that characterize a low human-polluted mangrove in French Guiana (western Atlantic Ocean) along an urban-to-natural gradient, focusing on the ‘rare’ phylum Kinorhyncha. This taxon seems to be mainly influenced by sediment size, being more abundant in silty sediments. The presence of microorganisms also enhances the community, likely due to a higher food availability. Oppositely, some trace metals of both lithogenic and anthropogenic origin, as well as predominance of coarser sediment particles, seem to negatively affect their populations. The importance of including the lesser abundant groups of meiofauna in ecological studies is evident, since it allows to have a better idea of the ecological state of marine benthic environments.

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Cepeda Diego, Sánchez Nuria, Spedicato Adriana, Michaud Emma, Zeppilli Daniela (2024). Environmental drivers modelling the mangrove Kinorhyncha community along an urban-to-natural gradient in French Guiana (western Atlantic Ocean). Frontiers In Marine Science, 11, 1342763 (8p.). Publisher's official version : https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2024.1342763 , Open Access version : https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00882/99416/