Responses of the macrobenthic community to the Dalian Bay oil spill based on co-occurrence patterns and interaction networks

Abstract

On July 16, 2010, a pipeline explosion spilled 1500 tons of crude oil into the Port of Dalian, China. To identify taxa responses to the spill, we exploited seven years of monitoring data to examine the co-occurrence of taxon pairs and the variation of the macrobenthic community. Non-parametric correlation analysis was used to construct interaction networks of relationships between oil spill contaminants and macrobenthic taxa. We observed that the impacted macrobenthic community not restored before 2016. The tolerance/sensitivity of taxa was inconsistent with the studies of oil impacts in other locations. We suggest revision of the ecological group classification of Sabellidae, Lumbrineridae, Terebellidae, Sternaspidae, and Spionidae. The variation in the frequency of coexistence indicates the potential impact of oil spill pollution on resource occupation. The interaction network involving macrobenthic families and stressors associated with the oil spill highlights how different macrobenthic families respond to different combinations of stressors.

Publication
Marine Pollution Bulletin, 171 :1126662

The figure above shows the patterns of taxa co-occurrence arising in background and impacted areas. a, b, c are the three situations of co-occurrence of taxa i and j; b1, b2, and b3 are the changes in b after the pollution event. The solid lines represent the disturbance from the pollution, and the translucent parts represent the disappeared individuals after the pollution.

Marco C Brustolin
Marco C Brustolin
Research Fellow

My research interests include numerical ecology, disturbance/diversity relationships and metacommunity dynamics. Pronouns he/him.

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