{"title":"波罗的海东北部爱沙尼亚沿岸海洋底栖生物栖息地的空间分布","authors":"G. Martin, J. Kotta, T. Möller, K. Herkül","doi":"10.3176/ECO.2013.3.01","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"INTRODUCTION Annex I of the Habitat Directive (Council Directive 92/43/EEC of 21 May 1992 on the conservation of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora) defines the habitat types of higher importance and in need of conservation within Europe. Together with the Birds Directive this directive forms a solid base for the European nature conservation policy and the Natura 2000 network. In order to implement the requirements of the directive and to resolve the existing needs for local conservation purposes, a benthic habitat classification system EBHAB (Eastern Baltic marine benthic HABitats) was developed in the frame of the multinational EU LIFE project 'Marine Protected Areas in the Eastern Baltic Sea (Baltic MPAs)'. In the current study a detailed inventory of the EBHAB habitat classes was performed within six study areas covering the most valuable nearshore marine areas and including several protected areas, i.e. the Natura 2000 areas in the Estonian coastal range. In general, prior to this inventory the knowledge on the distribution of habitats and associated biota in the coastal areas was very poor including only a few publications each containing a handful sampling sites only (e.g. Martin, 2000; Kotta & Orav, 2001; Kotta et al., 2008, Kovtun et al., 2009). Moreover, the published background information was very scattered and owing to differences in methodologies there was no way to systematize such knowledge. Thus, there was a need to examine the species composition and identify typical communities within their environment. The current inventory allowed us for the first time (1) to summarize the range of large-scale variability of the studied habitats in terms of benthic biodiversity, species composition, and dominance structure; (2) to provide a knowledge base for follow-on biological and ecological studies; and (3) thus, to provide important information for managing our marine resources. MATERIAL AND METHODS Study area Altogether six areas representing various environmental and climatic conditions in the northeastern Baltic Sea were studied in detail with the aim of classifying the observed benthic habitats according to the recently established EBHAB classes (Fig. 1). An overview of the study areas is given below. [FIGURE 1 OMITTED] Eastern and western Gulf of Finland areas The average depth of the Gulf of Finland is 37 m and the maximum depth 123 m. The coastal slope is quite steep and depths reach over 30 m in all bays of the study area. Sand, silt, or sandy clay bottoms dominate in deeper areas, boulders and stones prevail near the coast. The coastline is diverse and disjuncted by peninsulas, many small islands occur in the area. The eastern gulf receives runoff from a huge drainage area and the western gulf is a direct continuation of the Baltic Proper. Therefore the gulf has a permanent east-west gradient of salinity. The salinity range of the study area is 4.5-6.2. The area is strongly influenced by diffuse and point-source nutrient loads. West-Estonian Archipelago Sea The area comprises shallow bays with many small islets and mudflats. The average depth of the area is less than 4 m with the maximum close to 20 m. The bottom morphology of the area is flat, with gentle slopes towards deeps. The whole water basin is semi-exposed. Sand and sandy clay sediments prevail in the entire area of the archipelago. Due to the shallowness and clayey sediments already moderate winds result in strong resuspension of bottom sediments and poor underwater light conditions. Salinity varies from 0 to 7, being the lowest in the estuary of the Kasari River in the eastern part of the area and around 6-7 in the western, open-sea area. Haapsalu and Matsalu bays are the most eutrophied bays within the West-Estonian Archipelago Sea. Western Saaremaa Island Similarly to the previous study area this area consists of small shallow bays with many scattered islets. …","PeriodicalId":262667,"journal":{"name":"Estonian Journal of Ecology","volume":" 9","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2013-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"16","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Spatial distribution of marine benthic habitats in the Estonian coastal sea, northeastern Baltic Sea\",\"authors\":\"G. Martin, J. Kotta, T. Möller, K. Herkül\",\"doi\":\"10.3176/ECO.2013.3.01\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"INTRODUCTION Annex I of the Habitat Directive (Council Directive 92/43/EEC of 21 May 1992 on the conservation of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora) defines the habitat types of higher importance and in need of conservation within Europe. Together with the Birds Directive this directive forms a solid base for the European nature conservation policy and the Natura 2000 network. In order to implement the requirements of the directive and to resolve the existing needs for local conservation purposes, a benthic habitat classification system EBHAB (Eastern Baltic marine benthic HABitats) was developed in the frame of the multinational EU LIFE project 'Marine Protected Areas in the Eastern Baltic Sea (Baltic MPAs)'. In the current study a detailed inventory of the EBHAB habitat classes was performed within six study areas covering the most valuable nearshore marine areas and including several protected areas, i.e. the Natura 2000 areas in the Estonian coastal range. In general, prior to this inventory the knowledge on the distribution of habitats and associated biota in the coastal areas was very poor including only a few publications each containing a handful sampling sites only (e.g. Martin, 2000; Kotta & Orav, 2001; Kotta et al., 2008, Kovtun et al., 2009). Moreover, the published background information was very scattered and owing to differences in methodologies there was no way to systematize such knowledge. Thus, there was a need to examine the species composition and identify typical communities within their environment. The current inventory allowed us for the first time (1) to summarize the range of large-scale variability of the studied habitats in terms of benthic biodiversity, species composition, and dominance structure; (2) to provide a knowledge base for follow-on biological and ecological studies; and (3) thus, to provide important information for managing our marine resources. MATERIAL AND METHODS Study area Altogether six areas representing various environmental and climatic conditions in the northeastern Baltic Sea were studied in detail with the aim of classifying the observed benthic habitats according to the recently established EBHAB classes (Fig. 1). An overview of the study areas is given below. [FIGURE 1 OMITTED] Eastern and western Gulf of Finland areas The average depth of the Gulf of Finland is 37 m and the maximum depth 123 m. The coastal slope is quite steep and depths reach over 30 m in all bays of the study area. Sand, silt, or sandy clay bottoms dominate in deeper areas, boulders and stones prevail near the coast. The coastline is diverse and disjuncted by peninsulas, many small islands occur in the area. The eastern gulf receives runoff from a huge drainage area and the western gulf is a direct continuation of the Baltic Proper. Therefore the gulf has a permanent east-west gradient of salinity. The salinity range of the study area is 4.5-6.2. The area is strongly influenced by diffuse and point-source nutrient loads. West-Estonian Archipelago Sea The area comprises shallow bays with many small islets and mudflats. The average depth of the area is less than 4 m with the maximum close to 20 m. The bottom morphology of the area is flat, with gentle slopes towards deeps. The whole water basin is semi-exposed. Sand and sandy clay sediments prevail in the entire area of the archipelago. Due to the shallowness and clayey sediments already moderate winds result in strong resuspension of bottom sediments and poor underwater light conditions. Salinity varies from 0 to 7, being the lowest in the estuary of the Kasari River in the eastern part of the area and around 6-7 in the western, open-sea area. Haapsalu and Matsalu bays are the most eutrophied bays within the West-Estonian Archipelago Sea. Western Saaremaa Island Similarly to the previous study area this area consists of small shallow bays with many scattered islets. …\",\"PeriodicalId\":262667,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Estonian Journal of Ecology\",\"volume\":\" 9\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2013-09-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"16\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Estonian Journal of Ecology\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.3176/ECO.2013.3.01\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Estonian Journal of Ecology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3176/ECO.2013.3.01","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 16
摘要
《生境指令》附件一(理事会1992年5月21日关于保护自然生境和野生动植物的第92/43/EEC号指令)界定了在欧洲范围内具有较高重要性和需要保护的生境类型。该指令与《鸟类指令》一起构成了欧洲自然保护政策和Natura 2000网络的坚实基础。为了实施该指令的要求并解决当地保护目的的现有需求,在多国欧盟生命项目“东波罗的海海洋保护区(波罗的海海洋保护区)”的框架内开发了一个底栖生物栖息地分类系统EBHAB(东波罗的海海洋底栖生物栖息地)。在目前的研究中,在六个研究区域内对EBHAB生境类别进行了详细的清查,这些研究区域包括最有价值的近岸海洋区域和几个保护区,即爱沙尼亚沿海范围内的Natura 2000区域。总的来说,在进行这次清查之前,关于沿海地区生境和相关生物群分布的知识非常贫乏,只有少数出版物只包含少数采样点(例如Martin, 2000;Kotta & Orav, 2001;Kotta et al., 2008; Kovtun et al., 2009)。此外,出版的背景资料非常分散,由于方法不同,无法将这些知识系统化。因此,有必要研究物种组成并确定其环境中的典型群落。目前的清查使我们第一次总结了所研究生境在底栖生物多样性、物种组成和优势结构方面的大尺度变异范围;(2)为后续的生物学和生态学研究提供知识基础;(3)为管理海洋资源提供重要信息。材料和方法研究区域在波罗的海东北部共有六个区域代表不同的环境和气候条件进行了详细的研究,目的是根据最近建立的EBHAB类别对观察到的底栖生物栖息地进行分类(图1)。研究区域概述如下。[图1略]芬兰湾东部和西部地区芬兰湾的平均深度为37米,最大深度为123米。研究区各海湾岸坡坡度较大,深度均在30 m以上。沙子、淤泥或砂质粘土底部在较深的地区占主导地位,巨石和石头在海岸附近占主导地位。海岸线是多样的,由半岛分隔,许多小岛出现在该地区。东部海湾从一个巨大的排水区接收径流,西部海湾是波罗的海地区的直接延续。因此,海湾有一个永久的东西盐度梯度。研究区盐度范围为4.5 ~ 6.2。该地区受到弥漫性和点源性养分负荷的强烈影响。西爱沙尼亚群岛海该地区包括有许多小岛和泥滩的浅海湾。该区域的平均深度小于4 m,最大深度接近20 m。该地区的底部形态平坦,向深处有平缓的斜坡。整个水盆是半暴露的。沙和砂质粘土沉积物普遍存在于整个群岛地区。由于较浅和粘土沉积物,温和的风导致底部沉积物的强烈再悬浮和较差的水下光照条件。盐度在0 -7之间变化,东部卡萨里河河口的盐度最低,西部开阔海域的盐度在6-7左右。Haapsalu和Matsalu海湾是西爱沙尼亚群岛海中最富营养化的海湾。与之前的研究区域类似,这个区域由小的浅海湾和许多分散的岛屿组成。…
Spatial distribution of marine benthic habitats in the Estonian coastal sea, northeastern Baltic Sea
INTRODUCTION Annex I of the Habitat Directive (Council Directive 92/43/EEC of 21 May 1992 on the conservation of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora) defines the habitat types of higher importance and in need of conservation within Europe. Together with the Birds Directive this directive forms a solid base for the European nature conservation policy and the Natura 2000 network. In order to implement the requirements of the directive and to resolve the existing needs for local conservation purposes, a benthic habitat classification system EBHAB (Eastern Baltic marine benthic HABitats) was developed in the frame of the multinational EU LIFE project 'Marine Protected Areas in the Eastern Baltic Sea (Baltic MPAs)'. In the current study a detailed inventory of the EBHAB habitat classes was performed within six study areas covering the most valuable nearshore marine areas and including several protected areas, i.e. the Natura 2000 areas in the Estonian coastal range. In general, prior to this inventory the knowledge on the distribution of habitats and associated biota in the coastal areas was very poor including only a few publications each containing a handful sampling sites only (e.g. Martin, 2000; Kotta & Orav, 2001; Kotta et al., 2008, Kovtun et al., 2009). Moreover, the published background information was very scattered and owing to differences in methodologies there was no way to systematize such knowledge. Thus, there was a need to examine the species composition and identify typical communities within their environment. The current inventory allowed us for the first time (1) to summarize the range of large-scale variability of the studied habitats in terms of benthic biodiversity, species composition, and dominance structure; (2) to provide a knowledge base for follow-on biological and ecological studies; and (3) thus, to provide important information for managing our marine resources. MATERIAL AND METHODS Study area Altogether six areas representing various environmental and climatic conditions in the northeastern Baltic Sea were studied in detail with the aim of classifying the observed benthic habitats according to the recently established EBHAB classes (Fig. 1). An overview of the study areas is given below. [FIGURE 1 OMITTED] Eastern and western Gulf of Finland areas The average depth of the Gulf of Finland is 37 m and the maximum depth 123 m. The coastal slope is quite steep and depths reach over 30 m in all bays of the study area. Sand, silt, or sandy clay bottoms dominate in deeper areas, boulders and stones prevail near the coast. The coastline is diverse and disjuncted by peninsulas, many small islands occur in the area. The eastern gulf receives runoff from a huge drainage area and the western gulf is a direct continuation of the Baltic Proper. Therefore the gulf has a permanent east-west gradient of salinity. The salinity range of the study area is 4.5-6.2. The area is strongly influenced by diffuse and point-source nutrient loads. West-Estonian Archipelago Sea The area comprises shallow bays with many small islets and mudflats. The average depth of the area is less than 4 m with the maximum close to 20 m. The bottom morphology of the area is flat, with gentle slopes towards deeps. The whole water basin is semi-exposed. Sand and sandy clay sediments prevail in the entire area of the archipelago. Due to the shallowness and clayey sediments already moderate winds result in strong resuspension of bottom sediments and poor underwater light conditions. Salinity varies from 0 to 7, being the lowest in the estuary of the Kasari River in the eastern part of the area and around 6-7 in the western, open-sea area. Haapsalu and Matsalu bays are the most eutrophied bays within the West-Estonian Archipelago Sea. Western Saaremaa Island Similarly to the previous study area this area consists of small shallow bays with many scattered islets. …