“…This study was conducted with seawater, sediments, and organisms collected from the Danish Straits, which connect the North Sea and Baltic Sea. Eelgrass and blue mussels are widely distributed within many Danish fjords and along most Danish coastlines, co-occurring in both mixed and patchy spatial distributions (Reusch et al, 1994;Worm and Reusch, 2000;Kristensen, 2002;Frederiksen et al, 2004;Vinther et al, 2012). In this region of Denmark, coastal waters are often eutrophic (median total nitrogen = 550 μg N L −1 ; median chlorophyll a = 5.1 μg L − 1 ) and turbid (median turbidity = 10.0 mg dry L −1 ), resulting in highly-variable benthic light availability (Secchi depth range = 0.3-17.0 m) (Nielsen et al, 2002).…”