ARTÍCULO

Autor(es)

Rodríguez-Martínez RE, Medina-Valmaseda AE, BLANCHON P, Monroy-Velázquez LV, Almazán-Becerril A, Delgado-Pech B, Vásquez-Yeomans L, Francisco V, García-Rivas MC,

Registrado por
Año

2019

Tipo de artículo

Revistas indexadas

Título de artículo

Faunal mortality associated with massive beaching and decomposition of pelagic Sargassum

Volúmen

146

Número de registro

NA

Campo

CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA Y EL COSMOS

Disciplina

OTRAS ESPECIALIDADES EN MATERIA DE CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA DEL COSMOS Y DEL MEDIO AMBIENTE

Subdisciplina

Resumen

In 2018, the Mexican Caribbean coast received a massive influx of pelagic Sargassum spp. that accumulated and decayed on beaches producing organic decomposition products that made the water turbid and brown. Between May and September of the same year there were several reports of mass mortality of marine biota in this area. From these reports we estimate that organisms belonging to 78 faunal species died as result of this event, with demersal neritic fish and Crustacea being the most affected groups. The cause of mortality appears to be the combined effect of high ammonium and hydrogen sulfide concentrations, together with hypoxic conditions. If massive arrival of pelagic Sargassum spp. continues and algae is left to decay on the beach in large volumes then deterioration in water quality could affect coral reefs close to shore. Furthermore, barriers placed in lagoons to intercept the Sargassum spp. before it reaches the beach could impact reef fauna if the algae is left to die and sink on site.

URL (DOI, ORCID, HANDLE, enlace)
Fuente

Sistema Estatal de Información y Documentación Científica y Tecnológica

Número de Visitas

2

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