沉积物暴露对珊瑚的影响:实验研究的系统回顾。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Epub Date: 2022-02-07 DOI:10.1186/s13750-022-00256-0
Lillian J Tuttle, Megan J Donahue
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引用次数: 7

摘要

背景:针对珊瑚礁局部压力源的管理行动可以迅速改善水质和珊瑚礁生态系统状况。为了回应需要可操作的海岸径流和疏浚阈值的珊瑚礁管理者,我们对探索沉积物对珊瑚影响的实验研究进行了系统回顾和荟萃分析。我们确定了对珊瑚“不利”影响的暴露水平,同时考虑了沉积物承载(沉积与悬浮)、珊瑚生活史阶段和物种,从而提供了基于经验的对脆弱珊瑚礁的压力源阈值的估计。方法:我们检索在线数据库和灰色文献,以获得潜在研究的列表,评估其资格,并对其有效性和偏倚风险进行批判性评估。数据是从符合条件的研究中提取的,并按沉积物和珊瑚反应分组,以确定引起不利生理和/或致命影响的最低接触水平的阈值。meta回归估计了暴露水平与珊瑚反应强度之间的剂量-反应关系,使用随机效应结构来估计由研究和珊瑚种类等因素解释的方差比例。回顾结果:在对超过15,000条记录进行批判性评估后,我们对珊瑚对沉积物的反应进行了系统回顾,确定了86项研究纳入荟萃分析(45项研究沉积沉积物,42项研究悬浮沉积物)。对珊瑚造成不利影响的最低沉积物暴露水平远低于之前对珊瑚礁的“正常”水平:对于沉积的沉积物,对幼虫的不利影响低至1毫克/平方厘米/天(有限的沉降率),对成虫的不利影响低至4.9毫克/平方厘米/天(组织死亡);对于悬浮沉积物,对幼鱼的不良影响低至10 mg/L(生长率降低),对成鱼的不良影响低至3.2 mg/L(漂白和组织死亡)。珊瑚暴露在悬浮沉积物中导致组织死亡的时间至少是同等浓度的沉积沉积物的10倍,尽管生理变化对悬浮沉积物的反应比沉积沉积物快10倍。从连续反应变量(不利影响的大小)得出的阈值估计基本上与研究摘要中观察到的最低不利影响水平相匹配,或者帮助我们确定应该解决的研究空白,以便更好地量化沉积物暴露与珊瑚健康之间的剂量-反应关系。结论:我们编制了一个全球数据集,涵盖三个海洋,超过140种珊瑚,数十年的研究,以及一系列基于现场和实验室的方法。我们的综述和荟萃分析为美国联邦机构在管理咨询中使用的未观察到和最低观察到的不良反应水平(NOAEL, LOAEL)提供了信息。在缺乏更多地点或物种特定数据来为决策提供信息的情况下,我们的研究结果为保护脆弱的造礁珊瑚免受沉积物压力提供了最好的可用信息。根据我们的审查确定的差距和局限性,我们提出建议,以改进未来的研究,并建议未来的综合,以解开多种珊瑚礁压力源的潜在协同效应。补充信息:在线版本包含补充资料,下载地址为10.1186/s13750-022-00256-0。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Effects of sediment exposure on corals: a systematic review of experimental studies.

Background: Management actions that address local-scale stressors on coral reefs can rapidly improve water quality and reef ecosystem condition. In response to reef managers who need actionable thresholds for coastal runoff and dredging, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of experimental studies that explore the effects of sediment on corals. We identified exposure levels that 'adversely' affect corals while accounting for sediment bearing (deposited vs. suspended), coral life-history stage, and species, thus providing empirically based estimates of stressor thresholds on vulnerable coral reefs.

Methods: We searched online databases and grey literature to obtain a list of potential studies, assess their eligibility, and critically appraise them for validity and risk of bias. Data were extracted from eligible studies and grouped by sediment bearing and coral response to identify thresholds in terms of the lowest exposure levels that induced an adverse physiological and/or lethal effect. Meta-regression estimated the dose-response relationship between exposure level and the magnitude of a coral's response, with random-effects structures to estimate the proportion of variance explained by factors such as study and coral species.

Review findings: After critical appraisal of over 15,000 records, our systematic review of corals' responses to sediment identified 86 studies to be included in meta-analyses (45 studies for deposited sediment and 42 studies for suspended sediment). The lowest sediment exposure levels that caused adverse effects in corals were well below the levels previously described as 'normal' on reefs: for deposited sediment, adverse effects occurred as low as 1 mg/cm2/day for larvae (limited settlement rates) and 4.9 mg/cm2/day for adults (tissue mortality); for suspended sediment, adverse effects occurred as low as 10 mg/L for juveniles (reduced growth rates) and 3.2 mg/L for adults (bleaching and tissue mortality). Corals take at least 10 times longer to experience tissue mortality from exposure to suspended sediment than to comparable concentrations of deposited sediment, though physiological changes manifest 10 times faster in response to suspended sediment than to deposited sediment. Threshold estimates derived from continuous response variables (magnitude of adverse effect) largely matched the lowest-observed adverse-effect levels from a summary of studies, or otherwise helped us to identify research gaps that should be addressed to better quantify the dose-response relationship between sediment exposure and coral health.

Conclusions: We compiled a global dataset that spans three oceans, over 140 coral species, decades of research, and a range of field- and lab-based approaches. Our review and meta-analysis inform the no-observed and lowest-observed adverse-effect levels (NOAEL, LOAEL) that are used in management consultations by U.S. federal agencies. In the absence of more location- or species-specific data to inform decisions, our results provide the best available information to protect vulnerable reef-building corals from sediment stress. Based on gaps and limitations identified by our review, we make recommendations to improve future studies and recommend future synthesis to disentangle the potentially synergistic effects of multiple coral-reef stressors.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13750-022-00256-0.

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