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A Quantitative Assessment of Organic Carbon Content as a Regional Sediment-Condition Indicator

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Organic carbon content of sediments, whether directly or indirectly assessed, has often been used as an indicator of marine benthic community condition both in site-specific and regional scale condition assessment studies. The conceptual framework underlying use of this indicator was developed based primarily on site-specific studies. A quantitative analysis of literature data on sediment organic matter impacts in marine systems was conducted to determine whether abiotic indicators of sediment organic content respond as predicted by the conceptual model at larger spatial scales. The ability to detect predicted decreases in community metrics (abundance, species richness, species diversity index H’, biomass) varied among metrics, with best performance by species richness and H’. There was significant added variation both between and within analytical methods (loss on ignition, total organic carbon methods), emphasizing the need for careful cross calibration and quality control in studies with multiple laboratory partners. High levels of variability for biotic metrics versus organic carbon metrics appear typical for large scale studies, and organic matter source, site depth, and individual estuarine system differences were important sources of variation. Covariation of organic matter content with percent fine sediments is another known source of variation, but various normalization methods may be inadequate due to inherent sources of variation at estuary level. While likely still useful for point-source studies, multiple major sources of variation appear to limit the usefulness of sediment organic content as a benthic condition indicator at larger spatial scales.

Impact/Purpose

A literature review and quantitative assessment of the use of organic carbon content of sediments as an indicator of the condition of marine benthic communities determined that multiple sources of variation which are difficult to separate will limit usefulness of this parameter for large scale monitoring studies. The indicator was included in computation of benthic condition in EPA National Coastal Assessment 1-4, but subsequently removed from the list of indicators based on a preliminary review and best professional judgement at the time. The present quantitative assessment confirms the validity of the decision to remove the indicator from EPA assessments. The review found that methodological variations, organic matter source, site depth, and individual estuarine system differences were important sources of variation in sediment organic carbon content. Covariation with percent fine sediments is an additional known issue, but various proposed methods to normalize for this factor may not be adequate. Sediment organic carbon remains a useful site condition indicator and may still be a useful indicator for site-specific studies of organic matter inputs.

Citation

Nelson, W. A Quantitative Assessment of Organic Carbon Content as a Regional Sediment-Condition Indicator. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, 114:106318, (2020). [DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2020.106318]

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DOI: A Quantitative Assessment of Organic Carbon Content as a Regional Sediment-Condition Indicator
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Last updated on August 14, 2020
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