Effects of an experimental terrestrial runoff on the components of the plankton food web in a Mediterranean coastal lagoon

Type : ACL
Nature : Production scientifique
Au bénéfice du Laboratoire : Non
Statut de publication : Publié
Année de publication : 2023
Auteurs (8) : COURBOULES Justine VIDUSSI Franscesca SOULIÉ Tanguy NIKIFORAKIS Eftihis HEYDON Marie MAS S JOUX Fabien MOSTAJIR Behzad
Revue scientifique : Frontiers in Marine Science
Volume : 10
Fascicule :
Pages :
DOI : 10.3389/fmars.2023.1200757
URL : -
Abstract : The Mediterranean region is undergoing an increase in the frequency and
intensity of extreme rainfall events, resulting in terrestrial runoffs
that can affect aquatic environments in coastal regions. The goal of
this study was to investigate the effects of terrestrial runoff on
natural coastal planktonic assemblages. For this purpose, an in situ
mesocosm experiment was conducted in May 2021 in the Mediterranean Thau
Lagoon. A terrestrial runoff event was simulated in duplicate mesocosms
by adding natural forest soil that was left to maturate naturally for
two weeks in river water. After the addition of maturated soil, the
abundance and diversity within the planktonic food web, from viruses to
metazooplankton, were monitored for 18 days. The addition of maturated
soil to the terrestrial runoff treatment greatly depressed the light
availability in the mesocosms and potentially enhanced flocculation and
sedimentation in the mesocosms, resulting in an immediate negative
effect on phytoplankton, decreasing the chlorophyll-a (Chl-a)
concentration by 70\% for 12 days. Afterward, remineralized nutrient in
the terrestrial runoff treatment induced a subsequent positive effect on
phytoplankton, which resulted in a diatom bloom and an increase in
picophytoplankton and cyanobacteria abundance toward the end of the
experiment. Overall, the Chl-a concentration was 30\% lower in the
terrestrial runoff treatment over the 18 days of experiment, whereas
bacteria were 15\% more abundant than in the control. This suggests that
over the course of the experiment, the addition of maturated soil
favoured bacteria instead of phytoplankton at the base of the planktonic
food web. The addition of the maturated soil was detrimental for all
protozooplankton groups and mixotrophic dinoflagellates, but seemed to
favour metazooplankton, notably mollusk larvae, copepod nauplii, and
rotifers. This implies that in the terrestrial runoff treatment, the
preferential pathway for biomass transfer was through the direct
consumption of bacteria and/or phytoplankton by metazooplankton.
Therefore, in Thau Lagoon, after a terrestrial runoff, the transfer of
biomass within the planktonic food web would potentially be more
efficient by promoting direct transfer from the base to the top of the
food web, subsiding intermediate trophic levels such as
protozooplankton.
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Citation :
Courboules J, Vidussi F, Soulié T, Nikiforakis E, Heydon M, Mas S, Joux F, Mostajir B (2023) Effects of an experimental terrestrial runoff on the components of the plankton food web in a Mediterranean coastal lagoon. Front Mar Sci 10 | doi: 10.3389/fmars.2023.1200757