Crabs Engineering Effects On Soil Organic Matter and Nutrients Flow in Subtropical Mangroves Forest
Crabs Engineering Effects On Soil Organic Matter and Nutrients Flow in Subtropical Mangroves Forest
Crabs Engineering Effects On Soil Organic Matter and Nutrients Flow in Subtropical Mangroves Forest
ISSN 2320-1355
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INTRODUCTION
Burrowing ocypodid and grapsid crabs are
among the most abundant macrofauna inhabiting
the mangrove forests. Most of the sesarmid
crabs (family: Grapsidae) and fiddler crabs
(Ocypodidae) construct and maintain burrow
structures in mangrove sediments with a
significant engineering effect on their habitats
and associated fauna and flora. Burrowing
activities by these crabs potentially affect
biogeochemical sediment cycles by modifying
particle size distribution, affecting the
topography, improving aeration, reducing pore
water salinity, providing microhabitats for other
fauna and contributing to secondary production,
thus controlling nutrient release and affecting
mangrove productivity [1,2,3].
In mangrove forest, burrow construction by
crabs creates unique habitats for bacteria that in
turn, provide nutrients for primary production.
In addition, they enhance the exportation of
nutrients into the coastal zone. Burrows allow
rapid water flow and the transportation of
dissolved materials such as oxygen through the
sediment. The availability of oxygen to the
deeper sediments (anoxic-zone) creates a
favorable environment for certain bacteria
responsible for nutrient cycling. The benthic
nitrogen cycle and the mineralization of organic
matter are among the microbial processes that
are stimulated by bioturbation [4]. Nitrification
processes can be stimulated in burrow walls that
are periodically aerated by ventilation and
b)
2.5
-1
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
-1
a)
U.vocans
burrows
U. vocans
surface
P. bidens
burrows
2
1.5
1
0.5
0
P. bidens
surface
U.vocans
burrows
U. vocans
surface
P. bidens
burrows
P. bidens
surface
Figure1: Comparison of the total organic carbon (a) and total nitrogen (b) in crab burrow and surface
sediments. Values are mean SE (n = 3).
b)
0.7
0.6
NO3- ( mol g-1)
6
-1
NH4 ( mol g )
a)
3
2
1
0
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
P. bidens
surface
Figure 2. Comparison of the inorganic forms of nitrogen, a) NH4+ and b) NO3- crab burrow and
surface sediments. Values are mean SE (n = 3).
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a)
2
-1
-1
25
20
15
10
5
0
1.5
1
0.5
0
Figure4: Comparison of the total organic carbon a) and b) total nitrogen contents in sediments of
upper and lower intertidal areas. Values are mean SE (n = 3).
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b)
0.12
0.8
0.1
NO3- ( mol g -1)
a)
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.08
0.06
0.04
0.02
0
Lower intertidal
Upper intertidal
Lower intertidal
Upper intertidal
Figure 5: Comparison of the inorganic forms of nitrogen, a) NH4+ and b) NO3- concentrations in
sediments of upper and lower intertidal areas. Values are mean SE (n = 3).
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