10 results on '"Brucet, Sandra"'
Search Results
2. Chloride and sulphate toxicity to Hydropsyche exocellata (Trichoptera, Hydropsychidae): Exploring intraspecific variation and sub-lethal endpoints
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Sala, Miquel, Faria, Melissa, Sarasúa, Ignacio, Barata, Carlos, Bonada, Núria, Brucet, Sandra, Llenas, Laia, Ponsá, Sergio, Prat, Narcís, Soares, Amadeu M.V.M., and Cañedo-Arguelles, Miguel
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- 2016
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3. Environmental factors affecting bacterioplankton and phytoplankton dynamics in confined Mediterranean salt marshes (NE Spain)
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López-Flores, Rocío, Boix, Dani, Badosa, Anna, Brucet, Sandra, and Quintana, Xavier D.
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- 2009
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4. Comparative composition and dynamics of harmful dinoflagellates in Mediterranean salt marshes and nearby external marine waters
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López-Flores, Rocío, Garcés, Esther, Boix, Dani, Badosa, Anna, Brucet, Sandra, Masó, Mercedes, and Quintana, Xavier D.
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- 2006
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5. Effects of potash mining on river ecosystems: An experimental study.
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Cañedo-Argüelles, Miguel, Brucet, Sandra, Carrasco, Sergi, Flor-Arnau, Núria, Ordeix, Marc, Ponsá, Sergio, and Coring, Eckhard
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SALINIZATION ,CHEMICAL reactions ,POTASH mining ,POTASH industry ,AQUATIC invertebrates - Abstract
In spite of being a widespread activity causing the salinization of rivers worldwide, the impact of potash mining on river ecosystems is poorly understood. Here we used a mesocosm approach to test the effects of a salt effluent coming from a potash mine on algal and aquatic invertebrate communities at different concentrations and release modes (i.e. press versus pulse releases). Algal biomass was higher in salt treatments than in control (i.e. river water), with an increase in salt-tolerant diatom species. Salt addition had an effect on invertebrate community composition that was mainly related with changes in the abundance of certain taxa. Short (i.e. 48 h long) salt pulses had no significant effect on the algal and invertebrate communities. The biotic indices showed a weak response to treatment, with only the treatment with the highest salt concentration causing a consistent (i.e. according to all indices) reduction in the ecological quality of the streams and only by the end of the study. Overall, the treatment's effects were time-dependent, being more clear by the end of the study. Our results suggest that potash mining has the potential to significantly alter biological communities of surrounding rivers and streams, and that specific biotic indices to detect salt pollution should be developed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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6. Short-term effects of changes in water management on the limnological characteristics and zooplankton of a eutrophic Mediterranean coastal lagoon (NE Iberian Peninsula)
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Badosa, Anna, Boix, Dani, Brucet, Sandra, López-Flores, Rocío, and Quintana, Xavier D.
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MARINE pollution research ,EUTROPHICATION ,ZOOPLANKTON ,WETLANDS ,WATER management - Abstract
The Ter Vell (NE Iberian Peninsula) is a eutrophic coastal lagoon which has been flooded by the excess irrigation water and the agricultural runoff during the last decades. Between 1999 and 2003, restoration measures were applied to improve its water quality. At the same time, but independently, agricultural water management drastically reduced the freshwater inflow. The short-term effects of these management actions on the limnological characteristics of the lagoon were analysed by comparing two hydrological cycles, one before (1999/2000) and the other one after (2002/2003) the actions. The two cycles are illustrative of opposite situations in the hydrological functioning of coastal wetlands. In the first, the lagoon was exorheic, with prolonged flooding periods and a low residence time; in the second, it had a more endorheic character, with scarce water inputs and prolonged periods of confinement. Consequently, nitrogen inputs diminished and organic load and salinity increased as the internal loading and the accumulation effects became more relevant. These effects were actually caused by the drastic reduction in the freshwater inflow which prevented, in turn, the success of the restoration measures. The zooplankton community of the Ter Vell lagoon was not significantly altered by the hydrological change, at least in the short-term, and rotifers and cladocerans, mainly those species indicative of eutrophy, dominated the community. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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7. Size spectra and other size-related variables of river fish communities: systematic changes along the altitudinal gradient on pristine Andean streams.
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Benejam, Lluís, Tobes, Ibon, Brucet, Sandra, and Miranda, Rafael
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BIODIVERSITY conservation , *FISH communities , *BODY size , *FISH diversity , *SPECIES diversity , *ECOLOGICAL assessment - Abstract
The estimation of biodiversity is complex in remote areas like Andean-Amazon piedmont where the lack of knowledge is noticeable and most species have not yet been identified. An alternative to the taxonomical approach to assess biodiversity and community structure is to study the body size structure of the community. The present study aimed to identify systematic changes of the size structure of fish communities along the altitudinal gradient of pristine Andean streams. At the same time, we assessed if size structure of fish communities could be an alternative or complementary approach to traditional taxonomic metrics of ecological assessment. This study was conducted along two rivers of eastern Andean piedmont: Hacha River and Alto Madre de Dios basin. Our analysis showed lower values of total size range, maximum length and number of size classes in the highest places and increasing in lower reaches of the rivers. Concerning abundance size spectra, we found flatter slopes (indicating higher relative abundance of large fish) and lower coefficient of determination (i.e. less linear size spectra) and intercept at y-axis on upstream reaches. On the other hand, fish abundance, species richness and species diversity increasing from upstream to downstream. These systematic changes on size-related variables were similar using both basins together or independently and may be used in future studies as management reference conditions when assessing the effect of perturbations in freshwater ecosystems, while bypassing the error associated with the lack of taxonomic information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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8. Freshwater salinisation: a research agenda for a saltier world.
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Cunillera-Montcusí, David, Beklioğlu, Meryem, Cañedo-Argüelles, Miguel, Jeppesen, Erik, Ptacnik, Robert, Amorim, Cihelio A., Arnott, Shelley E., Berger, Stella A., Brucet, Sandra, Dugan, Hilary A., Gerhard, Miriam, Horváth, Zsófia, Langenheder, Silke, Nejstgaard, Jens C., Reinikainen, Marko, Striebel, Maren, Urrutia-Cordero, Pablo, Vad, Csaba F., Zadereev, Egor, and Matias, Miguel
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FRESHWATER biodiversity , *FRESH water , *FRESHWATER habitats , *ECOSYSTEM services , *FRESHWATER organisms , *HUMAN services , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
The widespread salinisation of freshwater ecosystems poses a major threat to the biodiversity, functioning, and services that they provide. Human activities promote freshwater salinisation through multiple drivers (e.g., agriculture, resource extraction, urbanisation) that are amplified by climate change. Due to its complexity, we are still far from fully understanding the ecological and evolutionary consequences of freshwater salinisation. Here, we assess current research gaps and present a research agenda to guide future studies. We identified different gaps in taxonomic groups, levels of biological organisation, and geographic regions. We suggest focusing on global- and landscape-scale processes, functional approaches, genetic and molecular levels, and eco-evolutionary dynamics as key future avenues to predict the consequences of freshwater salinisation for ecosystems and human societies. The global acceleration of freshwater salinisation due to human activities such as agriculture, resource extraction, and urbanisation and its amplification by climate change is unequivocal. Although research in this field is growing, there are key aspects at the ecological and evolutionary levels that remain unaddressed. Increasing salinisation is a problem as it can increase the stress or mortality of freshwater organisms, leading to a loss of diversity and/or functionality of freshwater ecosystems but also the services and benefits to human societies that they provide. We identify the main gaps of recent research and suggest a research agenda to facilitate future research efforts in order to achieve a more comprehensive understanding on freshwater salinisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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9. Normalized abundance spectra of fish community reflect hydro-peaking on a Mediterranean large river.
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Vila-Martínez, Núria, Caiola, Nuno, Ibáñez, Carles, Benejam, Lluis, and Brucet, Sandra
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FISH communities , *WATER quality biological assessment , *FRESHWATER ecology , *FISH ecology , *FOOD chains - Abstract
Highlights • Small sized species of alien fish dominate the lower Ebro River fish community. • Normalized Abundance Spectra (NAS) of fish were evaluated monthly for one year. • NAS reflected hydro-peaking impacts on the fish community. • High hydro-peaking conditions may increase predatory efficiency of piscivorous fish. Abstract The European Water Framework Directive requires the integration of body size characters as an important part of fish-based bioassessment tools for freshwaters ecological status determination. The study of the entire fish community size-structure provides valuable information about food web capacity, food web stability and ecological efficiency of aquatic ecosystems. One of the most used representations of community size structure is the Normalized Abundance Spectra (NAS) that provides an approximation of the total fish abundance and food web capacity (through the parameter y-intercept) and an estimation of food web efficiency (through the slope of the linear regression). In this study we explored NAS of the lower Ebro River fish community by integrating data from monthly electrofishing samplings during a whole year (November 2014- October 2015). We found that the percentage of total alien and alien-prey individuals were directly related with y-intercept and inversely related with slope of NAS. This is because the bulk of the community consists of introduced species of small body length. Furthermore, we detected significant relationships between NAS-related parameters and the hydrological variables describing diel flow oscillations and daily flow variability. Based on this, we suggest that high flow variability conditions and, above all, high hydro-peaking conditions, caused a diminution of the total abundance of fish and a decrease of the proportion of small sized fish (i.e. lower y-intercept and flatter slopes of NAS, respectively). Finally, a significant interaction between hydro-peaking and the percentage of alien-predators suggests that high hydro-peaking conditions benefit predation by facilitating predator-prey encounters. This is reflected by strong linear relationship between NAS parameters and percentage of piscivorous at high hydropeaking conditions that disappears at low hydro-peaking fluctuations. We concluded that the high proportion of alien fishes and the presence of a hydropower generation plant that operates by hydro-peaking are important factors determining fish size structure in the lower Ebro River. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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10. Three hundred ways to assess Europe's surface waters: An almost complete overview of biological methods to implement the Water Framework Directive
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Birk, Sebastian, Bonne, Wendy, Borja, Angel, Brucet, Sandra, Courrat, Anne, Poikane, Sandra, Solimini, Angelo, van de Bund, Wouter, Zampoukas, Nikolaos, and Hering, Daniel
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TERRITORIAL waters , *AQUATIC organisms , *PHYTOPLANKTON , *PLANT species , *MORPHOLOGY , *EMPIRICAL research , *EUTROPHICATION , *HYDROLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: According to the Water Framework Directive (WFD), the status of European surface waters is assessed using aquatic organism groups. Here we present an overview of 297 assessment methods, based on a questionnaire survey addressing authorities in all countries implementing the WFD. Twenty-eight countries reported on methods applied to rivers (30%), coastal waters (26%), lakes (25%) and transitional waters (19%). More than half of the methods are based on macroscopic plants (28%) or benthic invertebrates (26%); in addition, phytoplankton (21%), fish (15%) and phytobenthos (10%) were assessed. Countries of Central and Western Europe had developed almost all methods required for the WFD implementation. Two main sampling strategies were discernable: small-scale sampling of the taxonomically diverse groups of benthic invertebrates and phytobenthos that demand elaborate processing, versus large-scale sampling of vast, species-poor plant stands or the mobile fish fauna. About three-quarters of methods identified organisms to species-level while in particular phytoplankton-based methods used class- or phylum-level, or included no taxonomic information. Out of nine metric types distinguished, river methods used more sensitivity and trait metrics while for other water categories abundance metrics prevailed. Fish-based methods showed the highest number of metrics. Fifty-six percent of methods focussed on the detection of eutrophication and organic pollution, with shares decreasing from autotrophic to heterotrophic organism groups: phytoplankton>phytobenthos>macroscopic plants>benthic invertebrates>fish fauna. The order was almost reverse for hydrological or morphological deterioration: fish fauna and macroscopic plants>benthic invertebrates>phytoplankton>phytobenthos. These pressures were mainly assessed by methods applied to rivers and transitional waters. The pressure-impact relationship of about one-third of methods was not tested empirically with methods for transitional waters being the least validated. The strength of relationships differed significantly between organism groups and water categories. The correlation coefficients generally covered a broad range (<0.4 to >0.8), but on average with the pattern: phytoplankton>macroscopic plants>benthic invertebrates>phytobenthos and fish fauna. In terms of water categories the following order resulted: coastal waters>lakes>transitional waters>rivers. Status boundaries were mostly defined using statistical approaches. We advocate better reflection of the necessary sampling effort and precision, full validations of pressure-impact relationships and an implementation of more ecological components into classification. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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