Seasonal succession of estuarine fish, shrimps, macrozoobenthos and plankton: physico-chemical and trophic influence. The ironde estuary as a case study
Succession saisonnière de poissons, crevettes, macrozoobenthos et plancton : influence physico-chimique et trophique. L'estuaire de la Gironde comme cas d'étude
Résumé
Characterization of the structure and seasonal variability of biotic communities is essential for a better understanding of estuarine ecosystem functioning and in order to manage these highly fluctuant and naturally stressed systems. Numerous studies have investigated the role of environmental factors in controlling temporal variations in biotic communities. However, most have concluded that the explanatory power of physico-chemical variables was significant but not sufficient to explain ecological dynamics. The aim of the present study was to put forward the importance of trophic interactions as an additional structuring factor of species seasonal variability by examining simultaneous dynamics of all estuarine biotic communities, with the example of the oligo-mesohaline area of the Gironde estuary (SW France) as a case study. Data on the main biological groups (fish, shrimps, macrozoobenthos and plankton) sampled during a five-year period (2004-2008) at monthly intervals using a well standardized protocol, as well as data on environmental variables, were compiled here for the first time. According to species composition, results indicated that the Gironde estuary is used as a nursery, feeding, resident and migratory habitat. Results showed that, for almost all species, strong seasonal fluctuations occurred with a succession of species, indicating an optimization of the use of the available resources over a typical year by estuarine biological communities. Multivariate analyses discriminated four seasonal groups of species with two distinctive ecological seasons. A clear shift in July indicated a biomass transfer from a “planktonic phase” to a “bentho-demersal phase”, corresponding to spring and summer-autumn periods, respectively. In regard to the temporal fluctuations of dominant species of all biological groups, this study highlighted the possible influence of trophic relationships, predation in particular, on seasonal variations in species abundance, in addition to the physico-chemical influence. This study enabled us to synthesize crucial seasonal data and to discuss their integration into seasonal models of estuarine functioning and/or specific prey-predator models. In a global change context, prey abundance variations could generate changes in the temporal dynamics of their predators (and conversely), and potentially in the functioning of the whole estuarine system.