沿海水域疏浚工程的影响:对干扰的敏感性和海床生物资源的后续恢复的综述

1区 生物学 Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
L.J.Seiderer D.R.Hitchcock R.C.Newell
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引用次数: 293

摘要

本综述提供了一个框架,在这个框架内,可以理解疏浚对生活在海床上的生物资源(“底栖生物”群落)的影响,并对最近在欧洲沿海水域进行的有关聚集体疏浚的一些研究进行了展望。疏浚工程对渔业和鱼类本身及其产卵场的影响,不在本检讨的范围内。然而,我们已经表明,大陆架水域(如北海)的经验模型表明,人类渔业总产量的多达30%来自底栖生物资源,并且这些资源成为近岸水域食物网中日益重要的组成部分,在那里,生活在海底的海藻(大型植物)和海草的初级生产在很大程度上取代了水柱中的浮游植物。由于疏浚工程主要在近岸海岸沉积物中进行,而这些沉积物中底栖生物的生产过程对支持底栖鱼类的生产至关重要,因此我们的研究重点是底栖生物群落的性质、它们对疏浚和填海工程干扰的敏感性,以及在停止疏浚或处置废物后重建群落结构可能需要的恢复时间。从本质上讲,疏浚活动的影响主要涉及沿着疏浚头的路径从海床上物理移除基质和相关生物,部分涉及筛选和漏斗溢出的物料随后沉积的影响。由于波浪作用对沉积物的扰动仅限于30米以下的深度,因此,挖泥活动产生的坑和沟很可能是海床的持久特征,除了沙子可移动的浅水区。最近使用声学多普勒电流分析(ADCP)技术的研究表明,挖泥船排出的物料的初始沉降并不像人们普遍认为的那样,根据大多数模拟模型中使用的高斯扩散原理分散,而是表现得更像密度电流,在沉降过程的初始阶段,颗粒聚集在一起。因此,可能受到沉积物沉积影响的主要区域主要局限于距离排放溜槽几百米的区域。我们的回顾表明,海洋群落符合公认的生态演替原则,并且这些原则允许对停止疏浚后底栖生物群落可能恢复的一些现实预测。一般来说,生活在细小的可移动沉积物中的群落,例如发生在河口的群落,其特点是种群数量有限,它们很好地适应了经常受到干扰的沉积物的快速再定殖。疏浚沉积物的重新定殖最初是由这些“机会主义”物种完成的,随后,群落中补充了更多种类的长寿命和缓慢生长的“平衡”物种,这些物种的特征是稳定的未受干扰的沉积物,如粗砾石和珊瑚礁。文献报道的恢复率表明,恢复时间为6-8个月是特征性的
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of dredging works in coastal waters : A review of the sensitivity to disturbance and subsequent recovery of biological resources on the sea bed
The present review provides a framework within which the impact of dredging on biological resources that live on the sea bed ("Benthic" communities) can be understood, and places in perspective some of the recent studies that have been carried out in relation to aggregates dredging in European coastal waters. The impact of dredging works on fisheries and fish themselves, and on their spawning grounds is outside the scope of this review. We have, however, shown that empirical models for shelf waters such as the North Sea indicate that as much as 30% of total fisheries yield to man is derived from benthic resources, and that these become an increasingly important component of the food web in near-shore waters where primary production by seaweeds (macrophytes) and seagrasses living on the sea bed largely replaces that by the phytoplankton in the water column. Because dredging works are mainly carried out in near-shore coastal deposits, and these are the ones where benthic production processes are of importance in supporting demersal fish production, our review concentrates on the nature of ben thic communities, their sensitivity to disturbance by dredging and land reclamation works, and on the recovery times that are likely to be required for the re-establishment of community structure following cessation of dredging or spoils disposal. Essentially, the impact of dredging activities mainly relates to the physical removal of substratum and associated organisms from the seabed along the path of the dredge head, and partly on the impact of subsequent deposition of material rejected by screening and overspill from the hopper. Because sediment disturbance by wave action is limited to depths of less than 30m, it follows that pits and furrows from dredging activities are likely to be persistent features of the sea bed except in shallow waters where sands are mobile. Recent studies using Acoustic Doppler Current Profiling (ADCP) techniques suggest that the initial sedimentation of material discharged during outwash from dredgers does not, as had been widely assumed, disperse according to the Gaussian diffusion principles used in most simulation models, but behaves more like a density current where particles are held together during the initial phase of the sedimentation process. As a result, the principal area likely to be affected by sediment deposition is mainly confined to a zone of a few hundred metres from the discharge chute. Our review suggests that marine communities conform to well-established principles of ecological succession, and that these allow some realistic predictions on the likely recovery of benthic communities following cessation of dredging. In general, communities living in fine mobile deposits, such as occur in estuaries, are characterized by large populations of a restricted variety of species that are well adapted to rapid recolonization of deposits that are subject to frequent disturbance. Recolonization of dredged deposits is initially by these "opportunistic" species and the community is subsequently supplemented by an increased species variety of long-lived and slow-growing "equilibrium" species that characterize stable undisturbed deposits such as coarse gravels and reefs. Rates of recovery reported in the literature suggest that a recovery time of 6-8 months is charactristic
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期刊介绍: With increasing interest in the field and its relevance in global environmental issues, Oceanography and Marine Biology: An Annual Review provides authoritative reviews that summarize results of recent research in basic areas of marine research, exploring topics of special and topical importance while adding to new areas as they arise
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