Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9484068 | Journal of Sea Research | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
In situ measurements of ammonium and carbon dioxide fluxes were performed using benthic chambers at the end of spring and the end of summer in two soft-bottom Abra alba communities of the western English Channel (North Brittany): the muddy sand community (5 m, about 10% of surface irradiance) and the fine-sand community (19 m, about 1% of surface irradiance). High rates of ammonium regeneration were measured in the two communities at the end of summer (296.03±40.07 and 201.7±62.74 μmolN mâ2 hâ1, respectively) as well as high respiration rates (2.60±0.94 and 2.23±0.59 mmolC mâ2 hâ1, respectively). Significant benthic gross primary production (up to 6.11 mmolC mâ2 hâ1) was measured in the muddy sand community but no benthic primary production was measured in the fine-sand community. It suggests that microphytobenthic production values used in simulations previously published for these two communities were overestimated while values of community respiration were underestimated. The study confirms that this benthic system is heterotrophic and strengthens the idea that an important pelagic-benthic coupling is required for the functioning in such coastal ecosystems.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Oceanography
Authors
Aline Migné, Dominique Davoult, Jean-Jacques Bourrand, Guy Boucher,