MEPS

Marine Ecology Progress Series

MEPS is a leading hybrid research journal on all aspects of marine, coastal and estuarine ecology. Priority is given to outstanding research that advances our ecological understanding.

Online: ISSN 1616-1599

Print: ISSN 0171-8630

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps

Impact Factor2.1 (JCR 2025 release)

Article Acceptance Rate52.2% (2024)

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Volume contents
Mar Ecol Prog Ser 186:1-8 (1999)

Community recovery following catastrophic iceberg impacts in a soft-sediment shallow-water site at Signy Island, Antarctica

ABSTRACT: Ice disturbance is possibly the major structuring element of polar nearshore biological communities. Effects range from encapsulation by ice forming on rock substrata to gouging and trampling by bergs. Some 15 to 20% of the world's oceans areaffected by this phenomenon, yet measurements of the extent of biological destruction from iceberg impacts and subsequent community recovery are very rare. Communities can be held at early successional stages, or even completely destroyed by scouring, andthese effects occur from the intertidal to depths around 500 m in Antarctica. The wide scales of disturbance intensity are thought to add to the overall high levels of Antarctic benthic biological diversity, which has recently been shown to be similar totropical areas. Data here indicate >99.5% removal of all macrofauna and >90% removal of most meiofauna by iceberg impact on a soft-sediment habitat at Signy Island, Antarctica. Species return was via locomotion, advection or larval recolonisation,and all 3 mechanisms worked on different timescales. Locomotion caused groups to return within 10 d of an impact. Storms with wind speeds around 100 km h-1 induced water movements intense enough to advect meiofauna to the 9 m depth site.However, it was only during the strongest storm which occurred during the study (maximum wind speed 148 km h-1) that water movements were powerful enough to redistribute small macrofauna such as the bivalve Mysella charcoti.

KEYWORDS

Lloyd S. Peck (Co-author)

  • Natural Environment Research Council, British Antarctic Survey, High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET, United Kingdom

Simon Brockington (Co-author)

  • Natural Environment Research Council, British Antarctic Survey, High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET, United Kingdom

Sandra Vanhove (Co-author)

  • Instituut voor Dierkunde, Mariene Biologie, Universiteit Gent, K.L. Ledeganckstraat 35, 9000 Gent,Belgium

Myriam Beghyn (Co-author)

  • Instituut voor Dierkunde, Mariene Biologie, Universiteit Gent, K.L. Ledeganckstraat 35, 9000 Gent,Belgium