Nutrient overload promotes the transition from top-down to bottom-up control and triggers dystrophic crises in a Mediterranean coastal lagoon

The excess input of nutrients that triggers eutrophication processes is one of the main destabilizing factors of coastal ecosystems, being coastal lagoons prone to suffer these effects and present dystrophic crises. This process is aggravated by the current trend of rising temperatures and more freq...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2022-11, Vol.846, p.157388-157388, Article 157388
Hauptverfasser: Fernández-Alías, Alfredo, Montaño-Barroso, Teresa, Conde-Caño, Manuel-Rosendo, Manchado-Pérez, Sara, López-Galindo, Cristina, Quispe-Becerra, Jhoni-Ismael, Marcos, Concepción, Pérez-Ruzafa, Angel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The excess input of nutrients that triggers eutrophication processes is one of the main destabilizing factors of coastal ecosystems, being coastal lagoons prone to suffer these effects and present dystrophic crises. This process is aggravated by the current trend of rising temperatures and more frequent torrential rains due to climate change. We observed that the Mar Menor lagoon had a great capacity for self-regulation of its trophic web and resistance to the eutrophication process, but after 30 years of nutrient input due to the change in the agricultural regime in its drainage basin in the 1990s, the lagoon ecosystem has suffered several of these events. In this work, we characterize the seasonal dynamic of the pelagic system during the last dystrophic crises. Phosphorus and nitrogen alternate as the limiting nutrient for phytoplankton proliferation. The entrance of phosphorus is mainly related to vacation periods, while nitrogen inputs, both superficial and sub-superficial, are more related to chronic high nitrates concentration in the water table after the agricultural activities carried out in the area changed. Our analysis reveals that the summer season is prone to suffer periodical hypoxia events when the N/P ratio decreases, and the temperature rises. In the Mar Menor, the ecological balance has been maintained in recent decades thanks to, among other mechanisms, the spatial and temporal segregation of top-down control over phytoplankton exerted by three species of jellyfish. However, the deep reduction in the abundance of the summer jellyfish species and the excessive proliferation of phytoplankton has meant the loss of this control. Moreover, we have registered a decline in the abundance of all the other zooplanktonic groups during the dystrophic crises. We suggest that management actions should address the input sources of water and nutrients, and an integrated management of the activities carried out throughout the watershed. [Display omitted] •Eutrophication promotes the transition from top-down to bottom-up control.•The jellyfish's control of eutrophication can be overcome by phytoplankton blooms.•During dystrophic crises, primary production can be limited by nitrogen.•Phosphate input acts as a trigger for the dystrophic crisis.•Summer season is prone to dystrophic crises when and where N/P decreases below the Redfield ratio.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157388