Paper No. 7
Presentation Time: 9:30 AM
LIVE-DEAD DISCORDANCE IN MOLLUSCAN ASSEMBLAGES INDICATES HUMAN IMPACTS, NOT NATURAL TAPHONOMIC BIAS
Mismatches between the composition of a time-averaged death assemblage (dead remains sieved from the upper mixed-zone of the sedimentary column) and the local living community are typically attributed to natural post-mortem processes. However, statistical analysis of 73 molluscan datasets from estuaries and lagoons reveals significantly poorer average live-dead agreement in settings of documented anthropogenic eutrophication (AE) than in areas of negligible AE. Taxonomic similarity declines steadily as a function of AE severity and, for datasets composed exclusively of adults, rank-order agreement in species abundance drops where AE is suspected. Live-dead discrepancies in trophic composition are consistent with eutrophication. Seagrass-dwellers are anomalously abundant and/or organic-loving species anomalously scarce in the death assemblage, suggesting compositional inertia to recent environmental change. This agrees well with and constitutes an independent validation of results reported in 2006 for 34 datasets from open shelves, and in a setting where live-dead mismatches might be suppressed (higher sedimentation rates and longer histories of AE) or where the effects of AE might be swamped by post-mortem mixing among habitats of smaller patch-size and higher energy. These results indicate that (1) actualistic fidelity estimates from non-pristine areas are erroneously pessimistic, (2) live-dead discordance in surficial grab samples provides valuable evidence for strong anthropogenic modification of benthic communities, and (3) death assemblages are a promising means of reconstructing otherwise elusive pre-impact ecological baselines.