Drought periods driving bioinvasion on hard substrates at a tropical estuary, Eastern Brazil

Mar Pollut Bull. 2020 Nov:160:111563. doi: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2020.111563. Epub 2020 Aug 17.

Abstract

During drier periods estuarine salinization can stimulate the colonization of marine organisms and further bioinvasion, therefore, may cause future ecological change. In this sense, we applied the Rapid Assessment Surveys (RAS) on natural and artificial hard substrates during the most intense drought period (between 2014 and 2016) since 1950, in a tropical estuary in Eastern Brazil. Through the estuary salinization the ascidian Didemnum psammatodes overgrow the dominant native taxa; this dominance taxa shift provided suitable habitat favorable for invasion of Ophiothela mirabilis across the estuary. Even the invasion starts on artificial substrates, the higher resilience of natural substrates were not enough to enable the establishment of invasive species. This baseline is the first evidence of bioinvasion influenced by climate change drought periods in tropical estuaries in South America, which is a great advance for the development of management strategies to mitigate this and future climate change scenarios.

Keywords: Climate change; Drought; Estuarine ecology; Non-native species; RAS monitoring.

MeSH terms

  • Brazil
  • Climate Change
  • Droughts*
  • Ecosystem
  • Estuaries*