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Endobenthic Ecosystem Engineering: influence of sandprawns (Callichirus kraussi) on zooplankton assemblages

Ecosystem engineering activities of the burrowing Southern Africa sandprawn (Callichirus kraussi), were shown in recent research to influence bentho-pelagic coupling in soft sediment estuarine ecosystems through reducing phytoplankton biomass in the overlaying water. The phytoplankton reduction mech...

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Main Author: Oyatoye, Abioye E
Other Authors: Pillay, Deena
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Oyatoye, Abioye E
author2 Pillay, Deena
author_browse Oyatoye, Abioye E
Pillay, Deena
author_facet Pillay, Deena
Oyatoye, Abioye E
author_sort Oyatoye, Abioye E
collection Thesis
description Ecosystem engineering activities of the burrowing Southern Africa sandprawn (Callichirus kraussi), were shown in recent research to influence bentho-pelagic coupling in soft sediment estuarine ecosystems through reducing phytoplankton biomass in the overlaying water. The phytoplankton reduction mechanism was hypothesized to be driven by their adsorption along sandprawn burrow walls during irrigation. However, given that phytoplankton is a major trophic resource for filter feeders, any effect of sandprawns in reducing phytoplankton biomass may generate possible indirect effects on filter feeders such as zooplankton assemblages. To date, there has been no known research addressing questions on density of sandprawns and associated effects on zooplankton assemblages. This study therefore aimed to address this knowledge gap and quantify the influence of ecosystem engineering by C. kraussi on two size categories of zooplankton assemblages; mesozooplankton and microzooplankton, based on the premise that water pumping activities would lead to a decline in abundance of phytoplankton (adsorption onto burrow walls), thereby, resulting in negative bottom-up effects on zooplankton assemblages. This aim was accomplished using an 18-days mesocosms laboratory experiment, with each experimental mesocosm being each half-filled with sediment and water collected from the Zandvlei Estuary and divided into 3 treatments of varying C. kraussi densities (0% (control), 50% and 100% natural sandprawn density, n = 3). At the end of the experiment, increases in C. kraussi densities from controls to 100% treatments resulted in declines in abundance of total phytoplankton cells, nanophytoplankton, and picophytoplankton. However, sandprawn density had no significant effect on zooplankton assemblages, which were dominated by hyperbenthic taxa. There were discernible trends in dominance at the taxon level in microzooplankton and mesozooplankton assemblages. The copepod order Hapacticoida became increasingly dominant in both assemblages from control to 100% treatment with percentage contributions increasing from 79.23% to 95.93% in the microzooplankton assemblage and 43.07% to 92.28% in the mesozooplankton assemblage. Increasing dominance in both microzooplankton and mesozooplankton assemblages with increasing sandprawn density were confirmed using dominance plots. In conclusion, the main findings in this experiment suggest that endobenthic ecosystem engineering effects may not be confined to the sedimentary components of estuarine ecosystems but may extend to generate subtle effects on zooplankton taxa, mainly by way of increasing dominance. This study is the first direct evidence of the bentho-pelagic coupling effects of endobenthic ecosystem engineers on pelagic zooplankton assemblages that are dominated by hyperbenthic taxa and lays the foundation for subsequent research into understanding consequences of endobenthic ecosystem engineering on pelagic ecosystems.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:45.765Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37731 Endobenthic Ecosystem Engineering: influence of sandprawns (Callichirus kraussi) on zooplankton assemblages Oyatoye, Abioye E Pillay, Deena Biological Sciences Ecosystem engineering activities of the burrowing Southern Africa sandprawn (Callichirus kraussi), were shown in recent research to influence bentho-pelagic coupling in soft sediment estuarine ecosystems through reducing phytoplankton biomass in the overlaying water. The phytoplankton reduction mechanism was hypothesized to be driven by their adsorption along sandprawn burrow walls during irrigation. However, given that phytoplankton is a major trophic resource for filter feeders, any effect of sandprawns in reducing phytoplankton biomass may generate possible indirect effects on filter feeders such as zooplankton assemblages. To date, there has been no known research addressing questions on density of sandprawns and associated effects on zooplankton assemblages. This study therefore aimed to address this knowledge gap and quantify the influence of ecosystem engineering by C. kraussi on two size categories of zooplankton assemblages; mesozooplankton and microzooplankton, based on the premise that water pumping activities would lead to a decline in abundance of phytoplankton (adsorption onto burrow walls), thereby, resulting in negative bottom-up effects on zooplankton assemblages. This aim was accomplished using an 18-days mesocosms laboratory experiment, with each experimental mesocosm being each half-filled with sediment and water collected from the Zandvlei Estuary and divided into 3 treatments of varying C. kraussi densities (0% (control), 50% and 100% natural sandprawn density, n = 3). At the end of the experiment, increases in C. kraussi densities from controls to 100% treatments resulted in declines in abundance of total phytoplankton cells, nanophytoplankton, and picophytoplankton. However, sandprawn density had no significant effect on zooplankton assemblages, which were dominated by hyperbenthic taxa. There were discernible trends in dominance at the taxon level in microzooplankton and mesozooplankton assemblages. The copepod order Hapacticoida became increasingly dominant in both assemblages from control to 100% treatment with percentage contributions increasing from 79.23% to 95.93% in the microzooplankton assemblage and 43.07% to 92.28% in the mesozooplankton assemblage. Increasing dominance in both microzooplankton and mesozooplankton assemblages with increasing sandprawn density were confirmed using dominance plots. In conclusion, the main findings in this experiment suggest that endobenthic ecosystem engineering effects may not be confined to the sedimentary components of estuarine ecosystems but may extend to generate subtle effects on zooplankton taxa, mainly by way of increasing dominance. This study is the first direct evidence of the bentho-pelagic coupling effects of endobenthic ecosystem engineers on pelagic zooplankton assemblages that are dominated by hyperbenthic taxa and lays the foundation for subsequent research into understanding consequences of endobenthic ecosystem engineering on pelagic ecosystems. 2023-04-14T08:40:14Z 2023-04-14T08:40:14Z 2022 2023-04-14T06:51:11Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37731 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Oyatoye, Abioye E
Endobenthic Ecosystem Engineering: influence of sandprawns (Callichirus kraussi) on zooplankton assemblages
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Endobenthic Ecosystem Engineering: influence of sandprawns (Callichirus kraussi) on zooplankton assemblages
title_full Endobenthic Ecosystem Engineering: influence of sandprawns (Callichirus kraussi) on zooplankton assemblages
title_fullStr Endobenthic Ecosystem Engineering: influence of sandprawns (Callichirus kraussi) on zooplankton assemblages
title_full_unstemmed Endobenthic Ecosystem Engineering: influence of sandprawns (Callichirus kraussi) on zooplankton assemblages
title_short Endobenthic Ecosystem Engineering: influence of sandprawns (Callichirus kraussi) on zooplankton assemblages
title_sort endobenthic ecosystem engineering influence of sandprawns callichirus kraussi on zooplankton assemblages
topic Biological Sciences
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37731
work_keys_str_mv AT oyatoyeabioyee endobenthicecosystemengineeringinfluenceofsandprawnscallichiruskraussionzooplanktonassemblages