A benthic macroinvertebrate size spectra index for implementing the Water Framework Directive in coastal lagoons in Mediterranean and Black Sea ecoregions
Size spectra show common patterns of variation among ecosystem types, functional guilds and taxonomic
groups, as well as predictable responses to pressures. Here, we extend the size spectra approach
to macroinvertebrate ecological status assessment in transitional waters, by developing, testing and
validating a multi-metric index of size spectra sensitivity (ISS), which integrates size structure metrics
with metrics describing the sensitivity of size classes to anthropogenic disturbance and species
richness measures. The ability of different theoretical models of size spectra sensitivity to discriminate
between undisturbed and disturbed ecosystems and levels of environmental stress was evaluated.
We have used data on benthic macroinvertebrates within 12 Mediterranean and Black Sea transitional
water bodies (i.e. coastal lagoons) from Italy, Albania, Greece, Bulgaria and Romania and compared
the models’ efficiency through their pressure-impact response along organic load and enrichment gradients.
Data from a thirteenth Mediterranean lagoon was used for validation purposes. Asymmetric
models of size class sensitivity, assuming higher sensitivity of larger body size classes, were found
to be more effective than symmetric models, with higher sensitivity of less common size classes, in
distinguishing undisturbed from disturbed lagoons and lagoon stations. The ISS based on the asymmetric
sensitivity model that was most efficient in identifying the anthropogenic impacts also showed
significant dose–response relationships along environmental parameters describing the organic load
and enrichment gradients. A scheme for the classification of Ecological Quality Status based on the
macroinvertebrate ISS is proposed and validated. The validation procedure found that ISS is an effective
and sensitive monitoring tool, easy to apply and to inter-calibrate among laboratories. Moreover, the
tests performed here over a very large ecoregional area have proved the spatial robustness of the new
index.
BASSET Alberto;
BARBONE Enrico;
BORJA Angel;
BRUCET Sandra;
PINNA Maurizio;
D. QUINTANA Xavier;
REIZOPOULOU Sophia;
ROSATI Ilaria;
SIMBOURA Mika;
2011-10-06
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
JRC60623
1470-160X,
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X1100183X,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC60623,
10.1016/j.ecolind.2011.06.012,
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