ON THE ECOLOGY OF BRACKISH WATER LAGOONS IN GREAT-BRITAIN

被引:38
作者
BAMBER, RN
BATTEN, SD
SHEADER, M
BRIDGWATER, ND
机构
[1] Fawley Marine Biology Unit, Southampton, SO4 1TW, Fawley Power Station
[2] Department of Oceanography, Southampton University, Hants
[3] Department of Geology, Kingston Polytechnic, Surrey
关键词
D O I
10.1002/aqc.3270020105
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
1. Recent data on habitat characteristics and the animal and plant communities from 166 brackish lagoons in Great Britain have been analysed to interpret their community structure and the environmental features important to maintaining the diversity of specialist lagoonal species. 2. Lagoons supporting a diverse community of specialist species of restricted distribution are considered to be the most valuable in conservation terms. 3. Lagoons are concentrated in the south and east of the country, are predominantly shallow with fine sand and mud sediments and cover a range of sea-inlet types, areas and salinities (from zero to hyperhaline). 4. The environmental characteristics of lagoons show more variability than those of ambient sea-or estuarine water. 5. Six suites of species are identified: freshwater species, stenohaline marine lagoonal specialists, euryhaline lagoonal specialists, estuarine species tolerant of lagoons, estuarine species incidental in lagoons and underrecorded species. 6. The lagoons are categorized as freshwater sites and groups of saline sites of a range of conservation value in terms of their community, from high value sites dominated by stenohaline specialist species to sites supporting no specialist lagoonal community. 7. The higher value sites are bar-built or sluiced lagoons with a channel inlet, with salinities close to 35 parts per thousand, a heterogeneous sediment, predominantly shallow and with larger area if narrow. Spatial density of lagoons may be important in recruitment of stenohaline specialist species, and frequent exchange of a proportion of the lagoon water with adjacent estuary or sea-water may be important in maintaining requisite salinity. 8. Aspects worthy of further study are identified.
引用
收藏
页码:65 / 94
页数:30
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]  
Bamber R.N., ‘Environmental impact assessment: the example of marine biology and the UK power industry’, Marine Pollution Bulletin, 21, pp. 270-274, (1990)
[2]  
Bamber R.N., ‘The effects of acidic seawater on three species of lamellibranch mollusc’, Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 143, pp. 181-191, (1990)
[3]  
Bamber R.N., Bridgwater N.D., (1991)
[4]  
Bamber R.N., Bridgwater N.D., Batten S.D., (1991)
[5]  
Bamber R.N., Batten S.D., Bridgwater N.D., ‘The brackish ponds at Killingholme’. Aquatic Conservation, 1, pp. 173-181, (1991)
[6]  
Bamber R.N., Henderson P.A., ‘Preadaptive plasticity in atherinids and the estuarine seat of teleost evolution’, Journal of Fish Biology, 33, pp. 17-23, (1989)
[7]  
Barnes R.S.K., Coastal Lagoons. The Natural History of a Neglected Habitat, (1980)
[8]  
Barnes R.S.K., ‘Coastal lagoons of East Anglia, U. K.’, Journal of Coastal Research, 3, 4, pp. 417-427, (1987)
[9]  
Barnes R.S.K., ‘The faunas of land‐locked lagoons: chance differences and the problems of dispersal’, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 26, pp. 309-318, (1988)
[10]  
Barnes R.S.K., ‘The coastal lagoons of Britain. An overview and conservation appraisal’, Biological Conservation, 49, pp. 295-313, (1989)