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Benthic-pelagic coupling is manifested as the exchange of energy, mass, or nutrients between benthic and pelagic habitats. It plays a prominent role in aquatic ecosystems, and it is crucial to functions from nutrient cycling to energy transfer in food webs. Coastal and estuarine ecosystem structure and function are strongly affected by anthropogenic pressures; however, there are large gaps in our understanding of the responses of inorganic nutrient and organic matter fluxes between benthic habitats and the water column. We illustrate the varied nature of physical and biological benthic-pelagic coupling processes and their potential sensitivity to three anthropogenic pressures - climate change, nutrient loading, and fishing - using the Baltic Sea as a case study and summarize current knowledge on the exchange of inorganic nutrients and organic material between habitats. Traditionally measured benthic-pelagic coupling processes (e.g., nutrient exchange and sedimentation of organic material) are to some extent quantifiable, but the magnitude and variability of biological processes are rarely assessed, preventing quantitative comparisons. Changing oxygen conditions will continue to have widespread effects on the processes that govern inorganic and organic matter exchange among habitats while climate change and nutrient load reductions may have large effects on organic matter sedimentation. Many biological processes (predation, bioturbation) are expected to be sensitive to anthropogenic drivers, but the outcomes for ecosystem function are largely unknown. We emphasize how improved empirical and experimental understanding of benthic-pelagic coupling processes and their variability are necessary to inform models that can quantify the feedbacks among processes and ecosystem responses to a changing world.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13642 | DOI Listing |
Front Microbiol
August 2025
Zoological Department III, Natural History Museum Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Temperate coral gardens are dense coral formations, which support rich marine species diversity, enabling benthic-pelagic coupling. Over the past decades, coral gardens have been increasingly threatened by bottom fishing, oil and gas exploitation, and climate change. Microbiome research bears great potential for assisted resilience in targeted conservation and restoration approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
August 2025
Department of Chemistry, Life Sciences and Environmental Sustainability, University of Parma, Italy.
The anoxia risk in a shallow coastal lagoon (Sacca di Goro (SG), Italy) experiencing multiple pressures (clam aquaculture, anthropogenic nutrient inputs, climate change) was assessed by combining timescales of anoxia onset, benthic nutrient turnover, horizontal and vertical transport, multivariate statistics, and Geographic Information System (GIS). The biogeochemical and transport timescales were obtained by experimental measurements and physical modeling. To this purpose, daily oxygen (O) and nutrient fluxes [dissolved inorganic phosphorus (DIP), ammonium (NH), dissolved reactive silica (SiO)] were measured in the benthic and pelagic compartments at six areas of the lagoon catching its complex spatial heterogeneity due to riverine and marine inputs, clams farming, depths, flushing and vertical exchange times, amount and quality of organic matter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Zool A Ecol Integr Physiol
October 2025
Departamento de Biotecnología Marina, Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada (CICESE), Laboratorio de Ecofisiología de Organismos Acuáticos, Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico.
Serpulids are an ecologically important group of sessile suspension feeders that play a key role in benthic-pelagic coupling by filtering and transforming suspended organic matter from the water column. Temperature is one of the main abiotic factors influencing marine ectotherm physiology and metabolic responses, including serpulids and their growth, survival and distribution patterns. Thus, the present study objective was to determine thermal acclimation effects on metabolic responses of two serpulid species-Spirobranchus spinosus and S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Biol
May 2025
Department of Biology and Marine Biology and Center for Marine Science, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, NC 28409-3621, USA.
Tropical coral reef ecosystems are changing rapidly to an alternative state in which sponges are the dominant living habitat, with giant barrel sponges (GBSs, Xestospongia spp.) representing the largest biomass. Unlike other benthic reef organisms, GBSs are ecosystem engineers that pump large volumes of seawater, disrupting the benthic boundary layer and directing flow away from the reef surface and into the water column.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStrandings of bryozoans and benthic microalgae (Arribadas), with biomasses >200 tons, have been monitored in Balneáriu Camboriú, southern Brazil since 2003. Starting in 2021 after beach nourishment, the occurrences of strandings were interrupted for five months, and then restarted in 2022. To study these events and evaluate a secondary succession process, physical, chemical, and plankton data were sampled in the bay's surf zone, surface, and bottom water for a period of one year (2022 to 2023).
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