Litcius/Paper detail

Larger scyphozoan species dwelling in temperate, shallow waters show higher blooming potential

Alfredo Fernández-Alías, Concepción Marcos, Ángel Pérez‐Ruzafa

2021Marine Pollution Bulletin23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

142 scientific publications have been reviewed on the characteristics of the scyphozoans with respect to their ability to develop blooms and the most significant environmental characteristics that determine them. Special attention was paid to depth, temperature, salinity, chlorophyll concentration, and the habitat of the 39 registered blooming genera. After the review, we find that over the past decades, the number of scyphozoan blooming-species is higher than previously recorded, increasing from circa 14% to 25% of the class. Species that inhabit depths less than 27.1 m are prone to produce blooms, particularly in semienclosed areas with low rates of water renewal and high thermal amplitudes. Temperature appears as the main environmental factor controlling blooms, but food availability is essential to sustain the proliferations. Interspecies variability in the response to environmental factors observed in this work suggest that bloom predictive models should be constructed species-habitat-specific.

Topics & Concepts

BloomHabitatTemperate climateSalinityEcologyAlgal bloomEnvironmental scienceOceanographyTemperature salinity diagramsBiologyPhytoplanktonNutrientGeologyMarine Invertebrate Physiology and EcologyMarine Ecology and Invasive SpeciesCoral and Marine Ecosystems Studies