Percorrer por autor "Pardal, M.A."
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- Diel vertical behavior of Copepoda community (naupliar, copepodites and adults) at the boundary of a temperate estuary and coastal watersPublication . Gonçalves, A.M.M.; Pardal, M.A.; Marques, S.C.; S. Mendes; M.J. Fernández-Gómez; M.P. Galindo-Villardón; U.M. AzeiteiroDespite a growing interest in diel vertical migration as a research topic, there are few studies in southern European marine coastal systems. This study determined the main structuring hydrological and physical factors at different temporal scales in copepod assemblage distribution patterns. Seasonal, tidal, lunar and diel vertical migrations accomplished by horizontal movements were examined on the main copepod fraction of the Mondego estuary, Portugal. Seasonal samples were conducted hourly at the mouth of the estuary, during diel cycles (25h), both over neap and spring tides, at the bottom and surface, using a 63μm and 335μm mesh size nets. Simultaneously, four sites inside the estuary were sampled during flood tide to evaluate and compare copepods species' distribution along the estuary. Species life cycles were also categorized. Spring-spring tide best expresses the stable part of copepod-environment dynamics. Acartia tonsa and Oithona nana were distributed mainly at the bottom during ebb tides. A clear resident estuarine performance was noticeable in O.nana proving the estuarine preferences of the species. Neritic species showed preferences by saline waters, whereas the resident species were found mainly at estuarine areas. Copepodites stages showed a similar distribution pattern as estuarine species, avoiding leaving the estuary. In contrast nauplii and Oithona plumifera showed higher densities at surface flood tides. Indeed, vertical migrations accomplished by horizontal movements were mainly influenced by depth and tidal cycles, whereas day and night were not ecologically significant.
- Trematode fauna of Hydrobia ulvae (Gastropoda: Prosobranchia) in a eutrophic temperate estuaryPublication . Bordalo, M. D.; Ferreira, Susana; Jensen, K.T.; Pardal, M.A.Digenean trematodes infecting the mud snail Hydrobia ulvae were studied at two key sites of the Mondego Estuary (Portugal), from January 1993 to September 1995: a mud flat covered by the seagrass Zostera noltii, and a bare sand flat where seasonal macroalgal blooms occurred as a result of eutrophication. Digeneans belonging to Microphallidae, Notocotylidae, Haploporidae and Heterophyidae were recorded in snails from both sites whereas representatives from Echinostomatidae were only found in snails from the seagrass bed. The density of infected snails was higher at the seagrass bed than at the eutrophic area partly reflecting the difference in population structure of H. ulvae between sites. The Zostera noltii bed supports an abundant and well-structured mud snail population, with all size-classes represented, in contrast to a less abundant and juvenile dominated population in the eutrophic area. In the Z. noltii bed no clear seasonal and interannual patterns emerged in the infection densities. In the eutrophic area, the density of infected individuals increased in the presence of algae, and decreased during the occurrence of occasional flood events. Small scale spatial and temporal patterns in the prevalence of digenean trematodes in mud snails were therefore demonstrated within the Mondego Estuary that has experienced a mixture of anthropogenic impact and climate instability.
