The response of an ecological community to a disturbance event, and its capacity to recover, are of major interest to ecologists, especially at a time of increasing frequencies and intensities of environmental change brought about by humans. Meiofauna, a group of small-sized organisms, are an abundant and ubiquitous component of seafloor communities that respond rapidly to environmental change. We summarise the available research on the response of metazoan meiofauna to the most widespread anthropogenic disturbances in the marine environment, including bottom fishing, the introduction of invasive species and anthropogenic climate change. We show that disturbance effects on habitats interact critically with effects on resident meiofauna spec...
The worldwide exponential growth of off-shore mariculture is raising severe concerns about the impac...
In coastal marine ecosystems, predation might affect spatial distribution and population dynamics of...
Bottom trawling causes chronic and widespread disturbance to the seabed in shelf seas. Meiofauna may...
The response of an ecological community to a disturbance event, and its capacity to recover, are of ...
Humans have used, and had effects on, marine ecosystems throughout history. As the human population ...
Our planet is changing, and one of the most pressing challenges facing the scientific community revo...
Sedimentary habitats cover most of the ocean bottom and therefore constitute the largest single ecos...
Spring phytoplankton blooms are the baseline for any food web. At the seabed, benthic and pelagic re...
Predictions of the effects of global change on ecological communities are largely based on single ha...
Seagrass communities are subject to frequent disturbances that can affect the associated fauna. Seag...
Disturbance due to trawling reduces the biomass and production of macro-infaunal invertebrate commun...
he deep sea is Earth’s most typical environment and meiofauna its most common and arguably its most ...
The worldwide exponential growth of off-shore mariculture is raising severe concerns about the impac...
In coastal marine ecosystems, predation might affect spatial distribution and population dynamics of...
Bottom trawling causes chronic and widespread disturbance to the seabed in shelf seas. Meiofauna may...
The response of an ecological community to a disturbance event, and its capacity to recover, are of ...
Humans have used, and had effects on, marine ecosystems throughout history. As the human population ...
Our planet is changing, and one of the most pressing challenges facing the scientific community revo...
Sedimentary habitats cover most of the ocean bottom and therefore constitute the largest single ecos...
Spring phytoplankton blooms are the baseline for any food web. At the seabed, benthic and pelagic re...
Predictions of the effects of global change on ecological communities are largely based on single ha...
Seagrass communities are subject to frequent disturbances that can affect the associated fauna. Seag...
Disturbance due to trawling reduces the biomass and production of macro-infaunal invertebrate commun...
he deep sea is Earth’s most typical environment and meiofauna its most common and arguably its most ...
The worldwide exponential growth of off-shore mariculture is raising severe concerns about the impac...
In coastal marine ecosystems, predation might affect spatial distribution and population dynamics of...
Bottom trawling causes chronic and widespread disturbance to the seabed in shelf seas. Meiofauna may...