Document of bibliographic reference 282247

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Rating species sensitivity throughout gradient systems – a consistent approach for the Baltic Sea
Abstract
Evaluating the state of benthic communities has played an important role in water quality assessments. Indices incorporating species sensitivities, richness and densities are commonly applied. In Europe, the importance of benthic indices has increased in the last years with the implementation of the European Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) which at the same time demands the applicability of an index across regional scales. To date, environmental variability is rarely considered in benthic indices and most sensitivity rankings have the disadvantages of static values (i.e. the same value in all areas), expert judgement and a limited geographical range.This study presents species sensitivity values calculated along environmental gradients for the Baltic Sea. Sensitivities were calculated according to the procedure of the Benthic Quality Index (BQI). We created a matrix of subregions, classes of salinity, depth and gear to identify comparable subsets for data analysis. Altogether, 19 subsets were defined within the Baltic Sea basins. Sensitivity values were calculated for 329 species out of a total of 678 species that were recorded in this study. Sensitivity values of taxa vary between subsets as it was expected for different environmental conditions. Most sensitivity values can be assigned to species occurring in euhaline and polyhaline waters. Distribution of species with high and low sensitivity values differed along the salinity gradient. In euhaline waters more species with high sensitivity values occurred than species with low sensitivity values, while in mesohaline waters the ratio of high and low sensitivity values among species was almost equal. In oligohaline waters more species with lower sensitivity values were present.For the first time, sensitivity values were calculated for a large number of species using the same method for the entire Baltic Sea. This results in a Baltic-wide comprehensive set of sensitivity values based on a dataset across subregional borders, and divided along environmental gradients and gear type. The same principles can be applied to transient waters from rivers to coastal lagoons as well as to other environments with gradients of, e.g. hydrodynamic characteristics. Publicly available sensitivity values will increase transparency and support the improvement of state assessments under the MSFD.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000367411200031
Bibliographic citation
Schiele, K.S.; Darr, A.; Zettler, M.L.; Berg, T.; Blomqvist, M.; Daunys, D.; Jermakovs, V.; Korpinen, S.; Kotta, J.; Nygård, H.; von Weber, M.; Voss, J.; Warzocha, J. (2016). Rating species sensitivity throughout gradient systems – a consistent approach for the Baltic Sea. Ecol. Indic. 61(2): 447-455. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2015.09.046
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Kerstin Schiele
author
Name
Alexander Darr
author
Name
Michael Zettler
author
Name
Torsten Berg
author
Name
Mats Blomqvist
author
Name
Darius Daunys
author
Name
Vadims Jermakovs
author
Name
Samuli Korpinen
author
Name
Jonne Kotta
author
Name
Henrik Nygård
author
Name
Mario von Weber
author
Name
Joachim Voss
author
Name
Jan Warzocha

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2015.09.046

Document metadata

date created
2017-01-05
date modified
2017-01-05