Hydrographical conditions and benthic assemblages in the Suez Gulf, Egypt


Autoria(s): El-Komi, Mohamed M.; Emara, Ahmed M.; Mona, Mohamed H.
Data(s)

2002

Resumo

The coastal development and human activities along the Suez Gulf leading to sedimentation, degrade the quality of water, disturbing the natural structure and functions of aquatic communities. The Suez Gulf is a large semi-closed area with a 346 km long coastline on the western beach side. The prevailing physicochemical parameters in shallow intertidal waters were measured seasonally over the year. Benthic faunas in the sampling sites were studied indicating their regional distribution in relation to the impact of different environmental parameters in the intertidal region. The concentration of copper in seawater reached high level at St. IV (4.57 ug/1), which is exposed to sewage and petroleum hydrocarbons. The grain size of the sediment is a determining factor for the organic carbon concentration and the sandy substrate enhances organic matter degradation processes. A large number of oil fields are present along the western coast of the Suez Gulf, therefore, cadmium and organic matter appeared to be high. The values of pH did not vary greatly among the different sampling sites. It was high at EI-Ein, El-Sukhna and Ras-Shukeir due to the disposal of mainly acidic sewage and industrial effluents of the two stations Adabiya and Ras-Gharib respectively. The macrobenthos included 71 species embraced mainly from Mollusca (53.5% Gastropoda and 12.7% Bivalvia) and the other invertebrates included 7 groups namely, Rhizostoma, Polychaeta, Cirripedia, Amphipoda, Isopoda, Decapoda and Echinodermata. The distribution of benthos is affected by the temperature and salinity of seawater. The concentration of organic matter in seawater and in sediments in shallow waters shows high values in the central part of the Gulf of Suez.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/17803/1/PJMS11_001.pdf

El-Komi, Mohamed M. and Emara, Ahmed M. and Mona, Mohamed H. (2002) Hydrographical conditions and benthic assemblages in the Suez Gulf, Egypt. Pakistan Journal of Marine Sciences, 11(1 & 2), pp. 1-18.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/17803/

Palavras-Chave #Biology #Environment #Pollution
Tipo

Article

NonPeerReviewed