Back to Search Start Over

Sentinels of Seabed (SoS) indicator: Assessing benthic habitats condition using typical and sensitive species

Authors :
Serrano, Alberto
De-la-Torriente, Ana
Punzón, Antonio
Blanco, Marian
Bellas, Juan
Durán-Muñoz, Pablo
Murillo, Francisco Javier
Sacau-Cuadrado, María del Mar
García-Alegre, Ana
Antolínez, Ana
Elliot, Sophie
Guerin, Laurent
Vina-Herbón, Cristina
Stephano, Marra
González-Irusta, José Manuel
Serrano, Alberto
De-la-Torriente, Ana
Punzón, Antonio
Blanco, Marian
Bellas, Juan
Durán-Muñoz, Pablo
Murillo, Francisco Javier
Sacau-Cuadrado, María del Mar
García-Alegre, Ana
Antolínez, Ana
Elliot, Sophie
Guerin, Laurent
Vina-Herbón, Cristina
Stephano, Marra
González-Irusta, José Manuel
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Indicators are key tools used to assess the ecological status of the environment for ecosystem based management. Anthropogenic disturbances produce changes to habitat condition, which include modifications in species composition and their functions. Monitoring a group of sentinel species (from a taxonomic and functional point of view) provides useful insights into benthic habitat condition. Here, a new indicator, Sentinels of the Seabed (SoS) is proposed to assess state of benthic habitats using “sentinel” species (species which are characteristic of a habitat and sensitive to a given pressure). The selection of these sentinel species has two stages. First, a ‘typical species set’ is computed using intra-habitat similarity and frequency under reference conditions. Second, the ‘sentinel species set’ is generated by selecting the most sensitive species from the typical species set. This selection is made using specific indexes able to assess species sensitivity to a particular pressure. The SoS indicator method was tested on six case studies and two different pressure types (trawling disturbance and pollution), using data from otter trawl, box-corer and Remote Operate Vehicle images. In each scenario, the SoS indicator was compared to the Shannon-Wiener diversity index, Margalef index and total biomass, being the only metric, which showed the expected significant negative response to pressure in all cases. Our results shows that SoS was highly effective in assessing benthic habitats status under both physical and chemical pressures, regardless of the sampling gear, the habitat, or the case study, showing a great potential to be a useful tool in the management of marine ecosystems.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
Océan atlantique, Atlantique Nord, Atlantic Ocean, Atlántico Norte, Océano Atlántico, ICES, North Atlantic, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1395203997
Document Type :
Electronic Resource