Decline of unique Pontocaspian biodiversity in the Black Sea Basin: A review
Abstract The unique aquatic Pontocaspian (PC) biota of the Black Sea Basin (BSB) is in decline. The lack of detailed knowledge on the status and trends of species, populations, and communities hampers a thorough risk assessment and precludes effective conservation. This paper reviews PC biodiversity...
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Wiley
2021-10-01
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Series: | Ecology and Evolution |
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8022 |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Aleksandre Gogaladze Mikhail O. Son Matteo Lattuada Vitaliy V. Anistratenko Vitaly L. Syomin Ana Bianca Pavel Oana P. Popa Luis O. Popa Jan‐Johan terPoorten Jacobus C. Biesmeijer Niels Raes Thomas Wilke Arthur F. Sands Teodora Trichkova Zdravko K. Hubenov Maxim V. Vinarski Olga Yu Anistratenko Tatiana L. Alexenko Frank P. Wesselingh |
spellingShingle |
Aleksandre Gogaladze Mikhail O. Son Matteo Lattuada Vitaliy V. Anistratenko Vitaly L. Syomin Ana Bianca Pavel Oana P. Popa Luis O. Popa Jan‐Johan terPoorten Jacobus C. Biesmeijer Niels Raes Thomas Wilke Arthur F. Sands Teodora Trichkova Zdravko K. Hubenov Maxim V. Vinarski Olga Yu Anistratenko Tatiana L. Alexenko Frank P. Wesselingh Decline of unique Pontocaspian biodiversity in the Black Sea Basin: A review Ecology and Evolution Black Sea Basin conservation human impact mollusks Pontocaspian biodiversity population trends |
author_facet |
Aleksandre Gogaladze Mikhail O. Son Matteo Lattuada Vitaliy V. Anistratenko Vitaly L. Syomin Ana Bianca Pavel Oana P. Popa Luis O. Popa Jan‐Johan terPoorten Jacobus C. Biesmeijer Niels Raes Thomas Wilke Arthur F. Sands Teodora Trichkova Zdravko K. Hubenov Maxim V. Vinarski Olga Yu Anistratenko Tatiana L. Alexenko Frank P. Wesselingh |
author_sort |
Aleksandre Gogaladze |
title |
Decline of unique Pontocaspian biodiversity in the Black Sea Basin: A review |
title_short |
Decline of unique Pontocaspian biodiversity in the Black Sea Basin: A review |
title_full |
Decline of unique Pontocaspian biodiversity in the Black Sea Basin: A review |
title_fullStr |
Decline of unique Pontocaspian biodiversity in the Black Sea Basin: A review |
title_full_unstemmed |
Decline of unique Pontocaspian biodiversity in the Black Sea Basin: A review |
title_sort |
decline of unique pontocaspian biodiversity in the black sea basin: a review |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
Ecology and Evolution |
issn |
2045-7758 |
publishDate |
2021-10-01 |
description |
Abstract The unique aquatic Pontocaspian (PC) biota of the Black Sea Basin (BSB) is in decline. The lack of detailed knowledge on the status and trends of species, populations, and communities hampers a thorough risk assessment and precludes effective conservation. This paper reviews PC biodiversity trends in the BSB (Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova, Ukraine, and Russia) using endemic mollusks as a model group. We aim to assess changes in PC habitats, community structure, and species distribution over the past century and to identify direct anthropogenic threats. The presence/absence data of target mollusk species were assembled from literature, reports, and personal observations. Pontocaspian biodiversity trends in the northwestern BSB coastal regions were established by comparing 20th‐ and 21st‐century occurrences. The direct drivers of habitat and biodiversity change were identified and documented. We found that a pronounced decline of PC species and communities is driven by (a) damming of rivers, (b) habitat modifications that disturbed previous natural salinity gradients and settings in the studied area, (c) pollution and eutrophication, (d) invasive alien species, and (e) climate change. Four out of the 10 studied regions, namely, the Danube Delta–Razim Lake system, Dniester Liman, Dnieper–Bug estuary, and Taganrog Bay–Don Delta, contain favorable ecological conditions for PC communities and still host threatened endemic PC mollusk species. Distribution data are incomplete, but the scale of deterioration of PC species and communities is evident from the assembled data, as are major direct threats. Pontocaspian biodiversity in the BSB is profoundly affected by human activities. Standardized observation and collection data as well as precise definition of PC biota and habitats are necessary for targeted conservation actions. This study will help to set the research and policy agenda required to improve data collection to accommodate effective conservation of the unique PC biota. |
topic |
Black Sea Basin conservation human impact mollusks Pontocaspian biodiversity population trends |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8022 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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doaj-5c9713e663904bf78d1f7c5e5b78d59c2021-10-07T10:41:53ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-10-011119129231294710.1002/ece3.8022Decline of unique Pontocaspian biodiversity in the Black Sea Basin: A reviewAleksandre Gogaladze0Mikhail O. Son1Matteo Lattuada2Vitaliy V. Anistratenko3Vitaly L. Syomin4Ana Bianca Pavel5Oana P. Popa6Luis O. Popa7Jan‐Johan terPoorten8Jacobus C. Biesmeijer9Niels Raes10Thomas Wilke11Arthur F. Sands12Teodora Trichkova13Zdravko K. Hubenov14Maxim V. Vinarski15Olga Yu Anistratenko16Tatiana L. Alexenko17Frank P. Wesselingh18Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden The NetherlandsInstitute of Marine Biology National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Odessa UkraineDepartment of Animal Ecology & Systematics Justus Liebig University Giessen Giessen GermanyDepartment of Invertebrate Fauna and Systematics Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Kiev UkraineShirshov Institute of Oceanology of Russian Academy of Sciences Moscow RussiaConstanta Branch of the National Research and Development Institute for Marine Geology and Geoecology Constanta RomaniaGrigore Antipa National Museum of Natural History Bucharest RomaniaGrigore Antipa National Museum of Natural History Bucharest RomaniaDepartment of Zoology (Invertebrates) Field Museum of Natural History Chicago IL USANaturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden The NetherlandsNaturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden The NetherlandsDepartment of Animal Ecology & Systematics Justus Liebig University Giessen Giessen GermanyDepartment of Animal Ecology & Systematics Justus Liebig University Giessen Giessen GermanyInstitute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Sofia BulgariaNational Museum of Natural History Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Sofia BulgariaLaboratory of Macroecology and Biogeography of Invertebrates Saint‐Petersburg State University Saint‐Petersburg RussiaDepartment of Invertebrate Fauna and Systematics Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Kiev UkraineKherson Hydrobiological Station National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Kherson UkraineNaturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden The NetherlandsAbstract The unique aquatic Pontocaspian (PC) biota of the Black Sea Basin (BSB) is in decline. The lack of detailed knowledge on the status and trends of species, populations, and communities hampers a thorough risk assessment and precludes effective conservation. This paper reviews PC biodiversity trends in the BSB (Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova, Ukraine, and Russia) using endemic mollusks as a model group. We aim to assess changes in PC habitats, community structure, and species distribution over the past century and to identify direct anthropogenic threats. The presence/absence data of target mollusk species were assembled from literature, reports, and personal observations. Pontocaspian biodiversity trends in the northwestern BSB coastal regions were established by comparing 20th‐ and 21st‐century occurrences. The direct drivers of habitat and biodiversity change were identified and documented. We found that a pronounced decline of PC species and communities is driven by (a) damming of rivers, (b) habitat modifications that disturbed previous natural salinity gradients and settings in the studied area, (c) pollution and eutrophication, (d) invasive alien species, and (e) climate change. Four out of the 10 studied regions, namely, the Danube Delta–Razim Lake system, Dniester Liman, Dnieper–Bug estuary, and Taganrog Bay–Don Delta, contain favorable ecological conditions for PC communities and still host threatened endemic PC mollusk species. Distribution data are incomplete, but the scale of deterioration of PC species and communities is evident from the assembled data, as are major direct threats. Pontocaspian biodiversity in the BSB is profoundly affected by human activities. Standardized observation and collection data as well as precise definition of PC biota and habitats are necessary for targeted conservation actions. This study will help to set the research and policy agenda required to improve data collection to accommodate effective conservation of the unique PC biota.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8022Black Sea Basinconservationhuman impactmollusksPontocaspian biodiversitypopulation trends |