Polychaete Community of a Marine Protected Area along the West Coast of India-Prior and Post the Tropical Cyclone, Phyan.

Tropical cyclones are extreme random meteorological events that can have profound implications to coastal biodiversities. Given that the frequency, intensity and duration of these events are poised to increase due to the global climate change, understanding the ecological impacts of such erratic occ...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Soniya Sukumaran, Tejal Vijapure, Priti Kubal, Jyoti Mulik, M A Rokade, Shailesh Salvi, Jubin Thomas, V S Naidu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4996641?pdf=render
id doaj-3320e9a24885454cb1b74b7ae3e62eb1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3320e9a24885454cb1b74b7ae3e62eb12020-11-25T02:45:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01118e015936810.1371/journal.pone.0159368Polychaete Community of a Marine Protected Area along the West Coast of India-Prior and Post the Tropical Cyclone, Phyan.Soniya SukumaranTejal VijapurePriti KubalJyoti MulikM A RokadeShailesh SalviJubin ThomasV S NaiduTropical cyclones are extreme random meteorological events that can have profound implications to coastal biodiversities. Given that the frequency, intensity and duration of these events are poised to increase due to the global climate change, understanding the ecological impacts of such erratic occurrences becomes imperative to devise better management strategies. The eventful passage of the tropical cyclone, Phyan, along the northwestern coast of India in November 2009, coupled with the availability of historical data presented a rare opportunity to elucidate the consequences on the polychaete assemblages of the Malvan Marine Sanctuary and their subsequent recovery. This was achieved by comparison of the pre- and post-Phyan seasonal data from four different sites in and around the Sanctuary. MDS analyses and polychaete community parameters suggested conspicuous cyclone related effects on the polychaete community characteristics in the three outer stations off Malvan, whereas the relatively protected bay station remained more or less unscathed. Impacts, attributable to the cyclone apart from seasonal variations, included changes in polychaete composition, reductions in total polychaete density, species diversity, evenness and functional groups. Dominance of the opportunistic polychaete, Paraprionospiopatiens was all pervasive just after Phyan, resulting in poor diversity and evenness values. In the outer stations, diverse feeding modes present prior to the cyclone were replaced by microphagous feeders post the disturbance. However, the study also observed complete recovery as substantiated by the improvement inpolychaete density, diversity indices and re-instatement of multiple feeding guilds in affected areas. This resilience of the coastal waters off Malvan is attributed to its marine protected status, implying that reduced human interference aided rapid revival of damaged ecosystems.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4996641?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Soniya Sukumaran
Tejal Vijapure
Priti Kubal
Jyoti Mulik
M A Rokade
Shailesh Salvi
Jubin Thomas
V S Naidu
spellingShingle Soniya Sukumaran
Tejal Vijapure
Priti Kubal
Jyoti Mulik
M A Rokade
Shailesh Salvi
Jubin Thomas
V S Naidu
Polychaete Community of a Marine Protected Area along the West Coast of India-Prior and Post the Tropical Cyclone, Phyan.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Soniya Sukumaran
Tejal Vijapure
Priti Kubal
Jyoti Mulik
M A Rokade
Shailesh Salvi
Jubin Thomas
V S Naidu
author_sort Soniya Sukumaran
title Polychaete Community of a Marine Protected Area along the West Coast of India-Prior and Post the Tropical Cyclone, Phyan.
title_short Polychaete Community of a Marine Protected Area along the West Coast of India-Prior and Post the Tropical Cyclone, Phyan.
title_full Polychaete Community of a Marine Protected Area along the West Coast of India-Prior and Post the Tropical Cyclone, Phyan.
title_fullStr Polychaete Community of a Marine Protected Area along the West Coast of India-Prior and Post the Tropical Cyclone, Phyan.
title_full_unstemmed Polychaete Community of a Marine Protected Area along the West Coast of India-Prior and Post the Tropical Cyclone, Phyan.
title_sort polychaete community of a marine protected area along the west coast of india-prior and post the tropical cyclone, phyan.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Tropical cyclones are extreme random meteorological events that can have profound implications to coastal biodiversities. Given that the frequency, intensity and duration of these events are poised to increase due to the global climate change, understanding the ecological impacts of such erratic occurrences becomes imperative to devise better management strategies. The eventful passage of the tropical cyclone, Phyan, along the northwestern coast of India in November 2009, coupled with the availability of historical data presented a rare opportunity to elucidate the consequences on the polychaete assemblages of the Malvan Marine Sanctuary and their subsequent recovery. This was achieved by comparison of the pre- and post-Phyan seasonal data from four different sites in and around the Sanctuary. MDS analyses and polychaete community parameters suggested conspicuous cyclone related effects on the polychaete community characteristics in the three outer stations off Malvan, whereas the relatively protected bay station remained more or less unscathed. Impacts, attributable to the cyclone apart from seasonal variations, included changes in polychaete composition, reductions in total polychaete density, species diversity, evenness and functional groups. Dominance of the opportunistic polychaete, Paraprionospiopatiens was all pervasive just after Phyan, resulting in poor diversity and evenness values. In the outer stations, diverse feeding modes present prior to the cyclone were replaced by microphagous feeders post the disturbance. However, the study also observed complete recovery as substantiated by the improvement inpolychaete density, diversity indices and re-instatement of multiple feeding guilds in affected areas. This resilience of the coastal waters off Malvan is attributed to its marine protected status, implying that reduced human interference aided rapid revival of damaged ecosystems.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4996641?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT soniyasukumaran polychaetecommunityofamarineprotectedareaalongthewestcoastofindiapriorandpostthetropicalcyclonephyan
AT tejalvijapure polychaetecommunityofamarineprotectedareaalongthewestcoastofindiapriorandpostthetropicalcyclonephyan
AT pritikubal polychaetecommunityofamarineprotectedareaalongthewestcoastofindiapriorandpostthetropicalcyclonephyan
AT jyotimulik polychaetecommunityofamarineprotectedareaalongthewestcoastofindiapriorandpostthetropicalcyclonephyan
AT marokade polychaetecommunityofamarineprotectedareaalongthewestcoastofindiapriorandpostthetropicalcyclonephyan
AT shaileshsalvi polychaetecommunityofamarineprotectedareaalongthewestcoastofindiapriorandpostthetropicalcyclonephyan
AT jubinthomas polychaetecommunityofamarineprotectedareaalongthewestcoastofindiapriorandpostthetropicalcyclonephyan
AT vsnaidu polychaetecommunityofamarineprotectedareaalongthewestcoastofindiapriorandpostthetropicalcyclonephyan
_version_ 1724764684497715200