Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
Volume 189, Issues 1–2, 28 June 1995, Pages 103-122
Research articleVariability at different spatial scales between a subtidal assemblage exposed to the discharge of sewage and two control assemblages
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2021, Marine Pollution BulletinCitation Excerpt :Thus, MPB can adapt to various habitats including CO2 limited environments. The presence of large numbers of photosynthetic cyanobacteria, protists (diatoms, flagellates and dinoflagellates) and filamentous green and brown algae that live interstitially within the sediment particles of the tidal mudflats are able to conduct photosynthesis (Chapman et al., 1995). In dense intertidal biofilms and microbial mats, the diatoms showed seven times more efficiency in fixing carbon in comparison to bacteria, proving that algae possess greater potential for EPS production thereby contributing to sediment stability (Yallop et al., 2000).
Ecological features of a rocky intertidal community exposed to sewage effluent
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Copyright © 1995 Published by Elsevier B.V.