From Martyrdom to Resurrection for St. Lucie: Revival of a Meiofauna
Sreepat Jain1, Lee-Ann C. Hayek2, and Martin A. Buzas1
1Department of Paleobiology, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC
2Chief Mathematical Statistician, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC
The southernmost inlet of the Indian River Lagoon (Florida), St. Lucie has been monitored through replicate sampling for its meiofaunal (foraminiferal) density, species richness and evenness. The baseline study was in 1975/1976. and 2005 re-sampling showed that the mean foraminiferal density declined 83% from 1975/1976 levels (from 280 foraminifers per 20 ml of sediment to 46 in 2005). Similarly, the number of species declined by 79%; from 62 to 13 species in 2005. Additionally, a dramatic increase in the dominance of Ammonia was also observed; increasing from 42% of the total fauna in 1975/1976 to 76% in 2005. Based upon this 2005 data, a three-stage evaluation system of ecosystem decline over time was proposed with St. Lucie area nearing the beginning of Stage 3 (local extinction). Stage 1 is associated with increased foraminiferal density and species richness, and Stage 2 is marked by their decreasing values.
Here we present a new 2007-08 dataset from the same area. In 2007, we observed a mean foraminiferal density of 98 per 20 ml, an increase of 213% from 2005 levels and in 2008, of 114, an increase of 16% from 2007 levels. Additionally, in 2007 we observed 26 species, an increase of 100% from 2005 levels and 57 in 2008, an increase of 219% from 2007 levels. Similarly, the most abundant species decreased from a high of 76% in 2005 to 71% and 64% in 2007 and 2008 respectively. Thus, this preliminary data suggests that by summer of 2008, St. Lucie area had improved considerably and reverted to Stage 1 of the three-stage evaluation system, approaching 1975-76 levels.
AAPG Search and Discover Article #90085 © 2008 GCAGS 58th Annual Meeting, Houston, Texas