Biodiversity, trait composition and ecological functioning: impacts of coastal urbanisation on subtropical mudflats

The World's coastlines are being heavily modified at an alarming rate due to urbanisation which threatens natural coastal ecosystem health and biodiversity. The datasets represent the observed abundance of macrofauna (retained on a 0.5mm mesh sieve) retrieved from 24 subtropical mudflats along the south-east coast of Australia in 25cm x 25cm box cores and 50cm x 50cm quadrats (to a sediment depth of 11cm). Sites were located between south Deception Bay and Tallebudgera, Gold Coast. Sampling was carried out in winter 2016 (July-August) and summer 2017 (January-February). The summer assemblages contained more species, more individuals and had differing taxonomic composition. The 24 sites were categorised into four land-use sub-catchments e.g. high industry, low industry, residential and peri-urban (see paper for categories and site classifications). When indexed as a proportion of sub-catchment area, urbanisation did not correspond to a clear impact on macrofaunal composition; rather the nature of industry or activity was critical. Species biological traits were analysed using biological traits analysis which captured their life habit, morphology and behaviour (see accompanying paper for methods). Sediment properties such as the redox discontinuity layer (RDL) depth, organic matter content (as percentage on loss on ignition) and the proportion of silt and clay sized particles (in the top 11cm) and benthic chlorophyll a concentration (top 2 cm of sediment) were measured in triplicate toe describe each site with respect to urban gradients. Finally, the biological traits of mudflat macrofauna assemblages were compared to determine the effects of urbanisation on ecological functioning and delivery of ecosystem services of mudflats. The data revealed that functioning was conserved in mudflats experiencing current levels of enrichment, but this may decline with growing pressure from human populations. The results of this study illustrate that large-scale spatial data, such as from satellites, can be used to detect the cumulative effects of urbanisation when the pressures are highly resolved.

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Dissanayake, Navodha G, Frid, Christopher L J, Caswell, Bryony A (2020). Dataset: Biodiversity, trait composition and ecological functioning: impacts of coastal urbanisation on subtropical mudflats. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.915865

DOI retrieved: 2020

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 29, 2024
Last update November 29, 2024
License CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.915865
Author Dissanayake, Navodha G
Given Name Navodha G
Family Name Dissanayake
More Authors
Frid, Christopher L J
Caswell, Bryony A
Source Creation 2020
Publication Year 2020
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Dissanayake-etal_2020
Subject Areas
Name: Biosphere

Name: Oceans

Related Identifiers
Title: Influence of climate-induced biogeographic range shifts on mudflat ecological functioning in the subtropics
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecss.2020.106692
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2020
Source: Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Authors: Caswell Bryony A , Dissanayake Navodha G , Frid Christopher L J , Dissanayake Navodha G , Frid Christopher L J , Caswell Bryony A .

Title: Biodiversity, trait composition and ecological functioning: impacts of coastal urbanisation on subtropical mudflats
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1071/MF19242
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2020
Source: Marine and Freshwater Research
Authors: Caswell Bryony A , Dissanayake Navodha G , Frid Christopher L J , Dissanayake Navodha G , Frid Christopher L J , Caswell Bryony A .