•  
  •  
 

Turkish Journal of Zoology

Abstract

Cladoceran community dynamics were examined in the Romanian sector of the Black Sea during the warm seasons of 2013– 2020, using Marine Reporting  Units (MRUs) to evaluate spatial heterogeneity across transitional, coastal, and  marine waters. Analyses of density, biomass, mean individual biomass (MIB), and  species composition revealed interannual fluctuations superimposed on strong  nearshore–offshore gradients, with higher values in transitional and coastal MRUs.  The assemblage was consistently dominated by Pleopis polyphemoides and Penilia  avirostris, which together accounted for most of the total abundance and biomass.  Multivariate analysis identified significant differences in taxonomic composition  across MRUs and years, while correlation analyses highlighted temperature as the  primary environmental driver of cladoceran variability. Nutrient influences were more  spatially discrete, reflecting local riverine inputs and hydrodynamic mixing. Shifts in  MIB indicated alternations between small- and large-bodied dominance, signaling  changes in size structure and potential impacts on pelagic trophic transfer. The high  sensitivity of cladocerans to thermal and nutrient regimes underscores their value as  indicators for ecosystem assessments under the Marine Strategy Framework  Directive (MSFD), particularly within Descriptor 4 (Food Webs) and Descriptor 1  (Biodiversity). The present study provides an improved understanding of cladoceran  responses to environmental variability in the northwestern Black Sea and supports  their integration into regional monitoring frameworks.

Author ORCID Identifier

ELENA BISINICU: 0000-0002-7118-9141

LUMINITA LAZAR: 0000-0003-2428-7299

DOI

10.55730/1300-0179.3263

Keywords

Coastal-offshore gradient, ecosystem indicators, interannual variability, warm-season plankton

First Page

186

Last Page

198

Publisher

The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Türkiye (TÜBİTAK)

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Included in

Zoology Commons

Share

COinS