2012
DOI: 10.3354/meps10008
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Effects of the bioturbating lugworm Arenicola marina on the structure of benthic protistan communities

Abstract: Sedimentary coastal ecosystems like the European Wadden Sea in the northeasternAtlantic harbor large populations of burrowing infauna, such as arenicolide polychaetes. These 'ecosystem engineering' macrofaunal organisms destabilize sediments by reworking and irrigating them, leading to a reorganization of sediment physicochemical state and bacterial communities. Here, we tested the effects of the lugworm Arenicola marina on intertidal psammophilic protistan community diversity and structure in a field experime… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Only one previous study has assessed microbial eukaryote diversity in polychaete burrows (Engel et al ., ). Engel and colleagues () showed that ciliates and diatoms dominate A. marina burrows in non‐polluted coastal sediment. In this study, fungi dominated both H. diversicolor burrow and un‐bioturbated sediment sequence libraries.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Only one previous study has assessed microbial eukaryote diversity in polychaete burrows (Engel et al ., ). Engel and colleagues () showed that ciliates and diatoms dominate A. marina burrows in non‐polluted coastal sediment. In this study, fungi dominated both H. diversicolor burrow and un‐bioturbated sediment sequence libraries.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The potential impacts of bioturbation on sediment microbial eukaryote diversity have received much less attention compared with that of bacterial diversity. In one study, 18S rRNA gene pyrosequencing of DNA isolated from Arenicola marina burrows showed that resident protist communities are different to those in un‐bioturbated sediment and at the sediment–water interface (Engel et al ., ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Previous studies demonstrated that the burrows of Nereids (H. diversicolor or Arenicola marina) harbored different eukaryotic communities compared to the un-bioturbated sediments, and more Nematodes were detected in the burrows (24,25). However, the mentioned studies mainly focused on the burrow environments; the influence of macrobenthos bioturbation on overall microeukaryotes communities in a larger scale environment has not been thus far extensively characterized.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…A previous study (24) also indicated that the activities of lugworm (Arenicola marina) reduced the overall abundance of protists (mainly Cercozoa and Alveolate). The decrease of protists is probably due to the grazing/predation pressure of filter-feeding nereids, bivalves, and altered environmental conditions by macrobenthos bioturbation (28).…”
Section: Response To Macrobenthos Bioturbationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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