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An estimated three million shipwrecks exist worldwide and are recognized as cultural resources and foci of archaeological investigations. Shipwrecks also support ecological resources by providing underwater habitats that can be colonized by diverse organisms ranging from microbes to megafauna. In the present article, we review the emerging ecological subdiscipline of shipwreck ecology, which aims to understand ecological functions and processes that occur on shipwrecks. We synthesize how shipwrecks create habitat for biota across multiple trophic levels and then describe how fundamental ecological functions and processes, including succession, zonation, connectivity, energy flow, disturbance, and habitat degradation, manifest on shipwrecks. We highlight future directions in shipwreck ecology that are ripe for exploration, placing a particular emphasis on how shipwrecks may serve as experimental networks to address long-standing ecological questions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/biosci/biad084 | DOI Listing |
Among disturbance events to coral reef ecosystems, ship groundings can be among the most acute due to the physical damage they cause to coral reef habitats. Following ship groundings, monitoring studies show that some reefs recover whereas others retain changes in coral community structure for at least a decade. Thus, the recovery timescales following groundings are variable, but the general paradigm is that reef communities will begin on a trajectory toward recovery to the pre-disturbance state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
December 2024
Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, Plymouth PL1 3DH, United Kingdom.
The MV X-Press Pearl accident near Sri Lanka in May 2021 released several pollutants into the ocean, including 1843.3 t of urea, raising concerns about the impact on the region. This study uses a coupled ocean (NEMO)-biogeochemistry (ERSEM) model to simulate urea dispersion under various scenarios.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
February 2024
Department of Marine Biology, Leon H. Charney School of Marine Sciences, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
The distribution of symbiotic scleractinian corals is driven, in part, by light availability, as host energy demands are partially met through translocation of photosynthate. Physiological plasticity in response to environmental conditions, such as light, enables the expansion of resilient phenotypes in the face of changing environmental conditions. Here we compared the physiology, morphology, and taxonomy of the host and endosymbionts of individual Madracis pharensis corals exposed to dramatically different light conditions based on colony orientation on the surface of a shipwreck at 30 m depth in the Bay of Haifa, Israel.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioscience
January 2024
National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, National Ocean Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Beaufort, North Carolina, United States.
An estimated three million shipwrecks exist worldwide and are recognized as cultural resources and foci of archaeological investigations. Shipwrecks also support ecological resources by providing underwater habitats that can be colonized by diverse organisms ranging from microbes to megafauna. In the present article, we review the emerging ecological subdiscipline of shipwreck ecology, which aims to understand ecological functions and processes that occur on shipwrecks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
December 2023
School of Ocean Science and Engineering, University of Southern Mississippi, Ocean Springs, Mississippi, USA.
The seafloor contains complex ecosystems where habitat heterogeneity influences biodiversity. Natural biological and geological features including vents, seeps and reefs create habitats that select for distinct populations of micro- and macrofauna. While largely studied for macrobiological diversity, built habitats may also select distinct microbiomes.
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