24 research outputs found
Effects of future N deposition scenarios on the Galloway region of SW Scotland using a coupled sulphur and nitrogen model (MAGIC-Wand).
The Galloway region of Southwest Scotland has been subject to decades of acidic deposition which has resulted in damage to soils, surface waters and aquatic biota. A survey of lochs was conducted in 1979, 1988, and 1993, over which time there have been dramatic changes in total sulphur and nitrogen deposition. The MAGIC model successfully reproduced the major chemical changes in water chemistry from 1979 to 1988 during which time there was a rapid decline in sulphur deposition. A new coupled sulphur and nitrogen model (MAGIC-WAND) has been used to evaluate the regional hydrochemical response to changing patterns of N & S deposition from the period 1988 to 1993. Details of the model structure and parameterisation are discussed. The model under-predicts the response of non-marine sulphate in the region suggesting that there has been a slight increase in deposition over this period. Future hydrochemical responses to different nitrogen deposition scenarios are presented, indicating that the potential increase of nitrogen in surface waters is closely linked to the age and extent of different mosaics of commercial afforestation within the individual catchments
Habitat selection of the pink shrimp farfantepenaeus paulensis and the blue crab callinectes sapidus in an estuary in southern Brazil: influence of salinity and submerged seagrass meadows
This study was conducted in two estuarine inlets (Saco da
Mangueira and Saco do Arraial) at the Patos Lagoon estuary, southern Brazil.
The changes in relative abundance and size of post-larvae and juvenile shrimp
Farfantepenaeus paulensis and juvenile blue crab Callinectes sapidus were
compared, considering the influence of salinity and the presence of submerged
seagrass meadows. The analyses were performed using generalized linear models
(GLM) for abundance variations and ANOVA for variations on the size of
individuals. The pink shrimp was more abundant at Saco da Mangueira, in
seagrass meadows and areas of higher salinity. The blue crab was more abundant
at Saco do Arraial and in lower levels of salinity. The importance of submerged
vegetation for the blue crab lies in a preference of smaller crabs of the species
for the seagrass meadows. It has been shown that these species choose different
habitats in the estuary, and both the salinity and the presence of submerged
seagrass meadows influence the selection of habitat