Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4539709 Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Family and species-level AMBI scores for the NE Atlantic are strongly related.•Family-level AMBI scores in microtidal estuaries do not reflect environmental quality.•These estuaries are numerically dominated by families with high AMBI scores.•Natural organic accumulation in long-residence time estuaries confound AMBI trends.•Taxonomic distinctness does broadly reflect differences in environmental quality.

Analysis of benthic macroinvertebrate samples at a higher taxonomic level than species, e.g. family, potentially provides a more cost-effective protocol for environmental impact assessments and monitoring as it requires less time, funds and taxonomic expertise. Using the AMBI database, species ecological group scores are shown to be coherent within families. Faunal data from a wide range of environmental impact scenarios in the north-eastern Atlantic demonstrate that AMBI, calculated from mean values for families, exhibits a strong linear relationship with species-level AMBI, the correlation improving by using square-root transformed rather than untransformed abundances. In many regions of the world, however, the sensitivity of benthic macroinvertebrates to environmental perturbations is unknown, precluding the use of AMBI for environmental assessments. Yet the families are essentially the same as in the AMBI database. The utility of family-level AMBI is tested using data for four south-western Australian estuaries previously subjected to environmental quality assessments, but where only 17 species of the 144 taxa are included in the AMBI database. Although family-level AMBI scores reflect differences in environmental quality spatially and temporally within an estuary, they do not follow variations in environmental quality among estuaries. Indeed, south-western Australia estuaries are numerically dominated by families with high AMBI scores, probably due to the detrimental effects of natural accumulations of organic material in estuaries with long residence times. As taxonomic distinctness follows trends in environmental quality among estuaries, as well as temporally and spatially within a system, it provides an appropriate substitute for assessing the ‘heath’ of microtidal estuaries.

Graphical abstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload high-quality image (302 K)Download as PowerPoint slide

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
Authors
, , , ,