Short experiments (14–21 days) were carried out during autumn 1998 and spring 1999 at one selected site of the
Venice Lagoon to measure bioturbation activities and mixing rates, as well as to obtain quantitative information on
benthos functionality. Fluorescent sediment particles (luminophores, 63–350 μm) were introduced as pulse inputs
at the sediment surface. The concentration–depth profiles of the tracer were simulated with a new advection–
diffusion–non local model applied under non-steady state conditions. This allowed the quantification of the mixing
parameters associated with different mechanisms: biodiffusion (Db), bioadvection (W) and non-local mixing (Ke,z1, z2). A parameter RS (removed sediment) was also calculated to account for the flux of sediment due to nonlocal transport. Results show that bioturbation was dominated by biodiffusion in autumn and by bioadvection in
spring. Mean mixing parameters Db, W, and RS changed from 3.09 to 0.87 cm2 y−1, from 0.93 to 15.50 y−1 and from 5.85 to 7.79 g cm−2 y−1, respectively