Difference between revisions of "Biogenic reefs of Europe and temporal variability"

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|+ <span style="Font-size: 120%">'''Table 1: Past data on Sabellaria alveolata maximum abundance in Northwest England and Wales, with recent resurveys included. N = absent, R = rare, O = occasional, F = frequent, C = common, A = abundant and SA = super-abundant (massive reefs). P = recorded as present but abundance not known. From Cunningham ''et al.'' (1984)<ref name= "Cunning"/> and Frost ''et al.'' 2005)<ref name= "Frost"/>.'''</span>
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|+ <span style="Font-size: 120%">'''Table 1: Past data on ''Sabellaria alveolata'' maximum abundance in Northwest England and Wales, with recent resurveys included. N = absent, R = rare, O = occasional, F = frequent, C = common, A = abundant and SA = super-abundant (massive reefs). P = recorded as present but abundance not known. From Cunningham ''et al.'' (1984)<ref name= "Cunning"/> and Frost ''et al.'' 2005)<ref name= "Frost"/>.'''</span>
 
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Revision as of 09:16, 25 July 2012

European-scale distribution of biogenic reefs

Biogenic reefs can be described as hard compact structures created by the activity of living organisms. They do not share an uniform structure and are found at variable spatial scales. Dense colonies of several species are widely considered to be reef in Europe. Only four of these species are described in this report due to their contribution to sediment entrainment, bed stability and potential wave energy attenuation, these are: Sabellaria alveolata, Sabellaria spinulosa, Modiolus modiolus and Mytilus edulis. Many biogenic reefs habitats are currently threatened and/or are in decline in Europe as a result of various natural and anthropogenic pressures (OSPAR 2010[1]). Figure 1 illustrates the distribution of some biogenic reef habitats which are currently in decline around the coast of Europe.

Figure 1: Map taken from the OSPAR Status Report 2010 [1] depicting the distribution of the threatened and/or declining coastal and shelf habitats in Europe.

Sabellaria alveolata

Sabellaria alveolata (or honeycomb worm) is a sedentary tube-dwelling polychaete (or annelid worm). They use suspended sediment to construct their tubes, see Figure 2 (Wilson, 1971[2]). This polychaete is most commonly found in colonies. There are two major forms of colonies: veneers sand reefs (more info.)

Figure 2: Sabellaria alveolata[3].
Figure 3: Current OBIS distribution data for S. alveolata in Europe (data from OBIS, July 2012) showing distributions and unconfirmed records: red>101; orange=51-100; yellow=11-50; green=6-10; blue=1-5. Please note that older records and those from southern Europe are probably missing.

The records of Sabellaria alveolata throughout Europe are greater in northern latitudes (Figure 3). This is an obvious artifact of data reporting to OBIS as S. alveolata has been reported to be widely distributed in the France, Spain and Portugal and extends as far south as Morocco (Gruet, 1982[4]; Cunningham et al., 1984[5]). It reaches its northern limits in Britain but is restricted to the warmer waters off the west coast, as growth is inhibited below 5°C (Crisp, 1964[6]). The current confirmed northern limit is the Dumfriesshire coast of SW Scotland with records needing confirmation from the Firth of Clyde and Outer Hebrides. This species builds the largest reefs on the European coast; in particular the “Les Hermelles” reef in the Saint-Michael Bay in France, which is over 100 ha and is considered the largest reef in Europe (Gruet, 1982[4]; Marchand and Cazoulat, 2003 [7]).


Figure 4: Current OBIS distribution data for S. spinulosa in Europe (data from OBIS, July 2012): red>101; orange=51-100; yellow=11-50; green=6-10; blue=1-5. Please note that older records and those from southern Europe are probably missing.

Sabellaria spinulosa

Sabellaria spinulosa (or Ross worm) is a tube-dwelling polychaeta closely related to Sabellaria alveolata. It is a relatively disturbance-tolerant pioneers species (Jackson and Hiscock, 2008[8]). In contrast to Sabellaria alveolata, it mostly occurs in solitary or small aggregations. However, it can be gregarious under favorable conditions, forming large reef-structures (upto 30 cm high) (Hendrick and Foster-Smith, 2006[9]). The tubes are upright and typically consist of several layers of sediment particles( more info).

Sabellaria spinulosa reefs are known from all European coasts, except the Baltic and the waters of the Kattegat and Skagerrak, but are typically limited to areas with very high levels of suspended sediment (OSPAR 2010 [1], Figure 4). In the UK aggregations of S. spinulosa are reported to occur at a number of locations around the British Isles (Holt et al., 1998[10]; Davies et al., 2009[11]). Perhaps the best known example of an S. spinulosa reef in the UK is found in the mouth of the Wash (east coast of England), where reefs are elevated above the seafloor and have been found to extend over hundreds of square meters within the Norfolk Coast SAC (Foster‐Smith and Hendrick, 2003[12]). Relatively few records have been found in Scotland (Figure 4). Not all of these aggregations could be described as “reefs”, for instance where the species may only form superficial crusts on mixed substrata. On the German coast, intertidal and subtidal reefs have been reported from the Wadden Sea (Berghahn and Vorberg, 1993[13]) and from the southern North Sea where Linke (1951)[14] reported reefs up to 60 cm thick, 8 m wide and 60 m long. S. spinulosa has also been reported from the French coast, but without precise locations (Holt et al., 1998 [10]).


Intertidal Mytilus edulis

The distribution of Mytilus edulis (or common mussel) is circumpolar in boreal and temperate waters, in both the southern and northern hemispheres extending from the Arctic to the Mediterranean in the north‐east Atlantic (Soot‐Ryen 1955[15]). The majority of intertidal beds are found in the Wadden Sea (Netherlands, Germany and Denmark) where a 2007 inventory reported an estimated coverage of 1865 hectares in the Dutch sector (Goudswaard et al., 2007 [16]). It is also present in British coastal waters, Ireland (Jones et al., 2000 [17]) and there is a large bed (covering approximately 200 ha) in southern Brittany in France (Rollet et al., 2005 [18]).


Figure 5: Current OBIS distribution data for Modiolus modiolus in Europe (data from OBIS, July 2012): red>101; orange=51-100; yellow=11-50; green=6-10; blue=1-5. Please note that older records and those from southern Europe are probably missing.

Modiolus modiolus

Modiolus modiolus (or horse mussel) is an Arctic-boreal species that is limited in distribution by warmer temperatures to the south, but occasionally specimens have been reported as far south as Northwest Africa. It occurs from the Bay of Biscay to northern Norway, with occurrences off Iceland and the Faeroes (Tebble, 1966[19]; Poppe & Gotö, 1993[20]). It is found throughout British waters, but has most frequently been reported in northern and western areas (Figure 5). Extensive horse mussel beds are found only in parts of north and western Scotland, the Ards Peninsula, Strangford Lough, the Isle of Man, north-west Anglesey and north of the Lleyn Peninsula.

Descriptions of M. modiolus usually state the presence of aggregated clumps on mud or muddy‐gravel sediments, although the vast majority of these will not fall into the definition of biogenic reef, due to low density and coverage. However, several areas do contain large beds definable as biogenic reef including beds in Strangford Lough (Roberts, 1975), the Isle of Man (Jones, 1951; unpublished references in Holt et al., 1998[10]), Scottish waters (Comely 1978 [21]; Howson et al., 1994[22]) and within the Lleyn Peninsula (Lindenbaum et al., 2008[23]). One notable area of horse mussel beds that has received significant research are those within the Bay of Fundy on the Scotian Shelf, Canada (see Wildish et al.,2009 [24]).


Examples of temporal variability

Sabellaria alveolata

Cunningham et al. (1984)[5] reviewed the distribution and local abundance of S. alveolata in Britain. This review used past records from the literature, data from new shore surveys and reports via correspondence from other marine scientists. As a result of this exercise, changes in the extent of S. alveolata distribution over a period of approximately 100 years were documented. In order to evaluate the long-term temporal variability in S. alveolata distribution and abundance, the data were divided into three arbitrary periods: pre-1963 (before the cold winter of 1962/1963), 1964-1979 and 1980-1984 (Cunningham et al., 1984[5]).

Frost et al. (2005)[25] carried out a series of broadscale and focused mapping studies of S. alveolata in NW England and North Wales in 2003/04. This comprised a resurvey of sites that had been previously surveyed in the 1980s (Cunningham et al. 1984[5]). S. alveolata was found to be present at most of the sites where it had previously been recorded (e.g. Cunningham, 1984[5]) and at many of these sites it appears also to have increased in abundance (Table 1). S. alveolata had re-appeared in areas where it has been absent for many years (Table 1: Hilbre Island and Colwyn Bay) and had spread to areas for which there are no known previous records (Table 1: North Wirral, Rossal Point).

Hawkins (1993) suggested that S. alveolata was declining along the Cumbrian coast, but the present study found it to be abundant or super‐abundant at most sites. The records from the present study therefore seem to confirm the observation made by others that S. alveolata shows a great deal of temporal variability within a fairly constant geographic range (e.g. Cunningham et. al., 1984[5]). Even on a shore where S. alveolata is continually present, there is a great deal of variability in terms of abundance and ‘within shore’ distribution. For example, long term studies at Duckpool in North Cornwall (Wilson 1971[2]; 1974[26]; 1976[27]) and in Normandy, France (Gruet, 1986[28]) have revealed a great deal of variability over the years in the distribution and abundance of S. alveolata colonies within sites.


Table 1: Past data on Sabellaria alveolata maximum abundance in Northwest England and Wales, with recent resurveys included. N = absent, R = rare, O = occasional, F = frequent, C = common, A = abundant and SA = super-abundant (massive reefs). P = recorded as present but abundance not known. From Cunningham et al. (1984)[5] and Frost et al. 2005)[25].
Location S. alveolata abundance
Pre-1963 1964-1979 1980-1984 2003-2004
Penmon N N
Great Orme’s Head N N
Little Orme’s Head N N
Rhos-on-Sea N N
Colwyn Bay P N R
Hilbre Island A R N A
Wirral Foreshore A
Lytham Pier N N
St Annes Pier N N
Fleetwood,Rossall Pt N F
Heysham* F-O N N
Holme Island N N
Humphrey Head N N
Wadhead, Scar N N
Walney Island N N
Annaside Bank A SA
Tarn Bay A-SA SA
Drigg A SA
Seascale O SA
Sellafield O A-SA
Nethertown A A
St. Bees O C-A



Figure 6: Changing occurrences of S. spinulosa reefs in the Wadden Sea (Wadden Sea Secretariat, 2005). Figure adapted from OSPAR 2010 [1].

Sabellaria spinulosa

Subtidal S. spinulosa reefs have been reported to have been lost in at least five areas of the northeast Atlantic (Jones et al., 2000[17]). During the 1920s large reefs of S. spinulosa were common in the German Wadden Sea (Hagmeier and Kändler, 1927[29]) but most have since been lost. Similar records of loss have been recorded from the Lister Ley (Island of Sylt) and the Norderau area (Riesen and Reise, 1982[30]; Reise and Schubert, 1987[31]). Only three living reefs were found during surveys in the early 1990s compared to 24 during the 19th century (Figure 6). In the late 1990s, samples taken from the subtidal reefs in the German Wadden Sea consisted largely of compact lumps of empty tubes. In 2000, one of these reefs had diminished drastically in extent with the remainder in poor condition although dredge samples were occupied by many tiny tubes with living worms inside. A third reef which had previously extended over ~18 hectares could not be located during repeat surveys in 2002. In the UK there are reports of reefs being lost in Morecambe Bay (Taylor and Parker, 1993[32]), the Wash and the Thames (Warren and Sheldon, 1967[33]). In the western North Sea report comparing records from 1986 and 2000 suggest an increase in distribution and densities in the western North Sea (Rees, 2007[34]).


Modiolus modiolus

Only a few beds are known have been surveyed over long enough time spans for evidence of change to be apparent. In the Irish Sea, south of the Isle of Man, an extensive bed was almost completely lost due to scallop dredging (Veale et al., 2000[35]). For similar reasons, beds in Strangford Lough (Northern Ireland) also showed severe declines (Service and Magorrian, 1997[36]). Recently, beds in North Anglesey (Wales) have been destroyed by fishing activity (Holt, 2008[37], Countryside Council for Wales, pers. comm.). By contrast, in an Icelandic bay Modiolus modiolus was still the dominant by‐catch species in scallop dredges 30 years after scallop dredging began (Garcia and Ragnarsson, 2007[38]). In Sullom Voe (Shetland) a bed coincident with a pipeline showed signs of recovery, with some re‐colonisation of disturbed sediment after a few years (Mair et al. 2000[39]). On the legs of an oil platform in the North Sea a substantial population was present 10 years after installation, but in this situation the young mussels would have been free of much predation (Anwar et al. 1990[40]). As a species it appears to have declined in the North Sea. Comparing occurrences by ICES Rectangles Callaway et al. (2007)[41] showed that the species had been found in 11 rectangles in the 1982‐85 period, but comparable international surveys in 2000 found it in only 1 rectangle.


Mytilus edulis

Surveys covering the whole littoral of Niedersachsen, in Germany, revealed a decrease in the extent of M. edulis (5000 hectares in the late 1950s, 2700 ha in 1989/91, 1300 ha in 1994 to 170 ha in 1996). Mussel beds in the Ameland region have also disappeared after intensive fishing in the region (Dankers 1993[42]). In the Netherlands, Higler et al. (1998[43]) observed a serious decline in the populations of mussels between 1988 and 1990, mainly caused by fisheries. The extent of mussel beds decreased from the 1970s to the 1990s. In Denmark, intensive fisheries during 1984 to 1987 almost led to a complete disappearance of the mussel population (Kristensen, 1995[44]).


See also

Theseus Official Deliverable 3.3-Natural habitats for coastal protection and relevant multi-stressor coastal risks. Report and European Scale overview.

Natural barriers_ Biogenic reefs

Dynamics, threats and management of biogenic reefs action


References

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The main authors of this article are Firth, Louise, Davies, Andrew, Hawkins, Stephan, Airoldi, Laura and Colangelo, Marina Antonia
Please note that others may also have edited the contents of this article.