Modern biogeography of benthic foraminifera in an urbanized tropical marine ecosystem

Briony L. Mamo*, Jonathan D. Cybulski, Yuanyuan Hong, Paul G. Harnik, Anne Chao, Akira Tsujimoto, Chih Lin Wei*, David M. Baker*, Moriaki Yasuhara*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We investigated the biogeography of benthic foraminifera in a highly urbanized tropical seascape, i.e. Hong Kong, in order to assess their utility as bioindicators relative to other marine fauna. Hong Kong is one of the largest coastal cities on the planet and studies of other benthic fauna in the region are available for com-parison. We found that: (1) turbid, muddy habitats host a unique foraminiferal fauna; (2) areas with intermediate levels of eutrophication have the highest foraminiferal species diversity; (3) semi-enclosed and heavily polluted environments host a distinct foraminiferal fauna, characterized by low taxonomic diversity and/or high dom-inance, and that is acclimated to stressful marine conditions. Biodiversity patterns of foraminifera in Hong Kong are generally consistent with those of other soft-sediment macro-and meio-fauna (e.g. polychaetes, molluscs and ostracods); however, foraminifera may be more sensitive than these other groups to eutrophication and associated changes in coastal food webs. The tolerance of some, but not other, species to eutrophic and hypoxic conditions means that foraminiferal faunas can serve as bioindicators across a wide array of environmental con-ditions, in contrast with corals whose sensitivity to eutrophication results in their absence from eutrophied set-tings. The well-known autoecology of foraminifera taxa can help to characterize environmental conditions of different habitats and regional environmental gradients. Although the use of fauna as bioindicators may be most robust when data are compared for multiple taxonomic groups, when such broad sampling is not available, benthic foraminifera are particularly well suited for environmental assessments due to their ubiquity, interspe-cific environmental breadth, and the well-understood environmental preference of individual taxa.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationConservation Palaeobiology of Marine Ecosystems
EditorsR. Nawrot, S. Dominici, A. Tomašových, M. Zuschin
Place of PublicationCroydon
PublisherThe Geological Society
Chapter5
Pages79-98
Number of pages20
ISBN (Print)9781786205773
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Jul 2023

Publication series

NameGeological Society Special Publication
PublisherGeological Society Publishing House
Volume529
ISSN (Print)0305-8719

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Modern biogeography of benthic foraminifera in an urbanized tropical marine ecosystem'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this