Japan's nationwide long-term monitoring survey of seaweed communities known as the "Monitoring Sites 1000": Ten-year overview and future perspectives
GREAT EAST JAPAN
; LIFE-HISTORY STAGES
; BROWN ALGA
; RADICOSA LAMINARIALES
; NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY
; SIGANUS-FUSCESCENS
; SARGASSUM-HORNERI
; EISENIA-BICYCLIS
; TEMPORAL-CHANGES
; SORUS FORMATION
WOS学科分类:
Marine & Freshwater Biology
WOS研究方向:
Marine & Freshwater Biology
英文摘要:
"Monitoring Sites 1000" - Japan's long-term monitoring survey was established in 2003, based on the Japanese Government policy for the conservation of biodiversity. Ecological surveys have been conducted on various types of ecosystems at approximately 1000 sites in Japan for 15 years now and are planned to be carried out for 100 years. Since 2008, seaweed communities had been monitored at six sites, featuring the kelp (e.g. Saccharina and Ecklonia; Laminariales) and Sargassum (Fucales) communities in the subarctic and temperate regions of Japan. Annual surveys were carried out during the season when these canopy-forming seaweeds are most abundant. A non-destructive quadrat sampling method, with permanent quadrats placed along transects perpendicular to the shoreline, was used to determine species composition, coverage, and vertical distribution of seaweeds at these sites; while destructive sampling was done every 5 years to determine biomass. The occurrence of canopy-forming species Saccharina japonica (var. japonica) and Ecklonia cava have appeared to be stable at the Muroran (southwestern part of Hokkaido Island) and Shimoda (Pacific coast of middle Honshu Island) sites, respectively; whereas the coverage of Ecklonia radicosa (= Eckloniopsis radicosa) at the Satsuma-Nagashima site in southern part of Kyushu Island was highly variable until its sudden disappearance from the habitat in 2016. Thalli of E. radicosa lost most of their blades through browsing by herbivorous fish, and thus, this may be one of the causes of the decline. A shift in the community structure related to environmental changes had also been observed at some other sites. Pre- and post-disaster data revealed the impact of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami disasters, including a shift in the vertical distribution of Ecklonia bicyclis (= Eisenia bicyclis) to shallower depths at the Shizugawa site in the Pacific coast of northern Honshu Island, due to seafloor subsidence.
1.Kagoshima Univ, United Grad Sch Agr Sci, Kagoshima, Japan 2.Natl Fisheries Univ, Dept Aquabiol, Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi, Japan 3.Minamisanriku Town Off, Minamisanriku, Japan 4.Tohoku Univ, Grad Sch Agr Sci, Sendai, Miyagi, Japan 5.Kagoshima Univ, Fac Fisheries, Kagoshima, Japan 6.Tokyo Univ Marine Sci & Technol, Grad Sch Marine Sci & Technol, Tokyo, Japan 7.Kobe Univ, Res Ctr Inland Seas, Kobe, Hyogo, Japan 8.Mie Univ, Grad Sch Bioresources, Tsu, Mie, Japan 9.Hokkaido Univ, Field Sci Ctr Northern Biosphere, Muroran Marine Stn, Muroran, Hokkaido, Japan 10.Japan Sea Natl Fisheries Res Inst, Niigata, Japan 11.Natl Res Inst Fisheries & Environm Inland Sea, Hatsukaichi, Japan 12.Tokyo Univ Marine Sci & Technol, Tokyo, Japan 13.Wetlands Int Japan, Tokyo, Japan 14.Ctr Sustainable Soc, Minamisanriku, Japan
Recommended Citation:
Terada, Ryuta,Abe, Mahiko,Abe, Takuzo,et al. Japan's nationwide long-term monitoring survey of seaweed communities known as the "Monitoring Sites 1000": Ten-year overview and future perspectives[J]. PHYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH,2019-01-01