Benthic species as mud patrol - modelled effects of bioturbators and biofilms on large-scale estuarine mud and morphology

Publication date

2021-05

Authors

Brückner, Muriel Z.M.ISNI 0000000492852525
Schwarz, ChristianISNI 0000000419466820
Coco, Giovanni
Baar, Anne W.ISNI 0000000460975491
Albernaz, Marcio BoechatISNI 0000000492840831
Kleinhans, MaartenORCID 0000-0002-9484-1673ISNI 0000000114640007

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc

Abstract

Sediment-stabilizing and -destabilizing organisms, i.e. microphytobenthos (biofilms) and macrozoobenthos (bioturbators), affect the erodibility of muddy sediments, potentially altering large-scale estuarine morphology. Using a novel eco-morphodynamic model of an idealized estuary, we investigate eco-engineering effects of microphytobenthos and two macrozoobenthic bioturbators. Local mud erodibility is based on species pattern predicted through hydrodynamics, soil mud content, competition and grazing. Mud resuspension and export is enhanced under bioturbation and prevented under biostabilization through respective exposure and protection of the supra- and intertidal. Bioturbation decreases mud thickness and bed elevations, which increases net mud fluxes. Microphytobenthos reduces erosion, leading to a local mud increase of intertidal sediments. In multi-species scenarios, an effective mud-prone bioturbator strongly alters morphology, exceeding that of a more abundant sand-prone moderate species, showing that morphological change depends on species traits as opposed to abundance. Altering their habitat, the effective mud-prone bioturbator facilitates expansion of the sand-prone moderate bioturbator. Grazing and species competition favor species distributions of dominant bioturbators. Consequently, eco-engineering affects habitat conditions while species interactions determine species dominance. Our results show that eco-engineering species determine the mud content of the estuary, which suggests large effects on the morphology of estuaries with aggravating habitat degradation.

Keywords

biostabilization, bioturbation, eco-emorphodynamic model, eco-engineeering, estuary, mud, Geography, Planning and Development, Earth-Surface Processes, Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)

Citation

Brückner, M Z M, Schwarz, C, Coco, G, Baar, A, Boechat Albernaz, M & Kleinhans, M G 2021, 'Benthic species as mud patrol - modelled effects of bioturbators and biofilms on large-scale estuarine mud and morphology', Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, vol. 46, no. 6, pp. 1128-1144. https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.5080