Title: New invaders in the Caspian Sea
1New invaders in the Caspian Sea (CEP-SAP,
September, 2006)
2- Invader species appear in the Caspian Sea from
time to time during all history. - Species invasions occurred hundreds, thousands
and millions years ago. - In the last century due to human activity this
process becomes more and more rapid. Now
phytoplankton, zooplankton and macrozoobenthos
community are changed by invaders for more than
90 .
3- Nereis diversicolor was deliberately introduced
in the Caspian Sea in 1939. Now it is one of the
abundant species with average biomass up to 3-5
g/m2.
Distribution of Nereis diversicolor. (from
Yablonskaya, 1985 with modification according to
the later data).
4- Mollusk Abra ovata also was deliberately
introduced in the Caspian Sea in 1939. This
species distribute from 3 to 50 meters of depth
with maximum abundance about 10 meters of depth.
It biomass now range from 1 g/m2 to 4 g/m2in the
North, up to 8-11 g/m2 in the Middle and up to
4-6 g/m2 in the South Caspian Sea. It is one of
the important feeding organism for many
benthosvorous fishes.
Distribution of Abra ovata.(from Yablonskaya,
1985 with modification according to the later
data)
5- Mytilaster lineatus appeared in the Caspian Sea
in the beginning of 20th century. In a hundred
years it becomes one of the most abundant bivalve
species in the Caspian Sea. It inhabit all
possible bottoms on the depth up to 80 meters,
but prefers depth about 10 meters. At the blow of
abundance it biomass riches up to 1 kg/m2, but
later on it comes to equilibrium and stabilize
with a lower richness. In 2003 it biomass in
average was about 6-7 g/m2 in the North Caspian
Sea, 20-25 g/m2 in the Middle Caspian Sea, and up
to 30 g/m2 in the Western part of the South
Caspian Sea.
Distribution of Mytilaster lineatus(from
Yablonskaya, 1985 with modification according to
the later data).
6- Appearance of this three species (and also some
other species) dramatically change benthic
community. Several endemic mollusk species are
drastically reduce their numbers and are near to
extinct. Feeding of all benthosvorous fishes
changes according to changes in the benthic
community. Now these three invaders produced
about 42 of biomass in the North, 57 of biomass
in the Middle and up to 66 of biomass in the
South Caspian Sea
Average biomass of some zoobenthos organisms in
2003 (g/m2)
North Caspian Middle Caspian South Caspian
Nereis diversicolor 1.71 3.97 4.38
Abra ovata 4.68 8.28 5.74
Mytilaster lineatus 6.55 24.57 31.58
Other 18.06 28.35 21.87
Total 31.00 65.17 63.57
Three invaders (per cent) 42 57 66
Data on Nereis diversicolor, Abra ovata, and
Mytilaster lineatus biomasses obtained from
Ardabieva et al., The food base of the Northern
Caspian in 2003 and L.A. Kochneva Description
of the zoobenthos of the Middle and Southern
Caspian in the Fisheries Research in the
Caspian Scientific-research works results for
2003, FSUI KaspNIRKh press, Astrakhan, 2004
7- Changes in the zooplankton community are even
more dramatic. - Now about 90 of all number and biomass in the
Middle and South Caspian sea are produced by only
one species Acartia tonsa, which appears in the
1980th. It produces up to 20 mg/m3 (5000 sp/m3)
in the North Caspian Sea. In the Middle and in
the South Caspian Sea it is now the dominant
species with abundance 1200-3000 sp/m3 and
biomass up to 15-30 mg/m3. It forms here up to
95-97 of the total zooplankton biomass.
8- Biomass of main zooplankton groups in 2002 - 2005
(mg/m3)
North Caspian North Caspian North Caspian Middle Caspian Middle Caspian Middle Caspian Middle Caspian South Caspian South Caspian South Caspian South Caspian
2002 2003 2005 2002 2003 2004 2005 2002 2003 2004 2005
Acartia tonsa 3.7 19.4 19.4 15.7 31.94 33.4 7.0 5.5 14.57 33.4 7.1
Other copepods 14.6 46.8 65.1 0.2 1.76 0.6 0.01 0.1 0.76 0.6 0
Cladocera 126.6 110.7 535.3 0.3 0.012 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.03
Rotatoria 214.7 73.4 216.0 0 0.11 0 0.01 0 0 0 0.003
Other 10.4 30.6 103.3 1.00 0 0.2 0.08 0 0.25 0.2 0.01
Total 370.0 280.9 939.1 17.2 33.72 34.3 7.3 5.7 15.59 34.3 7.15
Acartia in per cents 1 7 2 91 95 97 96 96 93 97 99
Data from A. A. Polyaninova, A. G. ardabieva, T.
A. Tatarintseva, O. V. Terletskay, L. I.
Tarasova, L.V. Malinovskay, L. A. Kochneva The
present state of plankton and benthos in the
Caspian sea M. I. Karpuk et al. estimation of
the impact of Mnemiopsis Leidyi on the biota of
the Caspian Sea and development of measures to
reduce its number Materials of the international
Conference present state and ways of improvement
of scientific investigation in the Caspian
basin, May 16-18, 2006, Astrakhan, FSUI
KaspNIRKh press, Astrakhan, 2006 Ardabieva et
al., The food base of the Northern Caspian in
2003 Tinenkova D. Kh., Petrenko E. I
Description of the zooplankton of the Middle and
Southern Caspian in October 2003 in the
Fisheries Research in the Caspian
Scientific-research works results for 2003, FSUI
KaspNIRKh press, Astrakhan, 2004
9- In 2004 three new zooplankton species were
detected in the Middle Caspian Sea. - Oithona similis Claus,1963
- Sagitta setosa Muller,1847
- Calanus euxinus (Hulsemann)
- All three species are from the fauna of the Black
Sea. It is difficult to predict what happened
with these species, could they establish
themselves in the Caspian Sea or not. But it
shows, that the process of species invasion via
Volga-Don canal continue
Data from T. A. Shiganova, E.I. Musaeva, L. A.
Pautova and Yu. V. Bulgakova, 2005. The problem
of invaders in the Caspian Sea in the Context of
the finding of new zoo- and phytoplankton species
from the Black Sea // Biology Bulleten, 32, 1,
65-74.
10- And few words on the phytoplankton community.
- This community experienced shock after
introduction of diatom alga Rhizosolenia
calcar-avis, which appear in the 1930th . It is
one of the dominant species now. Maximum
abundance was observed for this species in
1960-1970th . Later on it biomass was stabilized
on a lower level. Sometimes it abundance are as
high as 5 mln. sp/m3 with biomass about 650
mg/m3. Maximum was observed near the Sagandyk
peninsula -27400 mg/m3 in 1960th.
11(No Transcript)
12Graphics show evidently that Rhizosolenia
calcar-avis has not one, but two pikes. The first
was occurred in 1960th and the second one in
1990th. Now it biomass and development are on a
low level. It is substituted by other diatoms
with smaller size. But in the winter and early
Spring in biomass is still big in the Middle and
South Caspian.
13- And this is not the only invader diatoms in the
Caspian. During last years several new species
appears in the Sea. - Pseudo-nitzchia seriata (Nitzchia seriate)
- appears in 1990th
- Cerataulina pelagica (Cerataulina bergonii)
- first report from 2002
- Tropidoneis lepidoptera
- first report from 2004
- Chaetoceros peruvianus (or Ch. pendulus ?)
- first report from 2004
14Biomass of main groups of algae in the Caspian
Sea in 2001-2005
North Caspian North Caspian Middle Caspian Middle Caspian Middle Caspian South Caspian South Caspian South Caspian
2003 2005 2003 2004 2005 2001 2003 2005
Green algae 213 4,74 0.2 0.9 3.8 14.4 0.6
Blue-green algae 329 ? 0.76 4.3 1.2 12.3 4.82 2.3
Pyrrophyta 13.3 ? 20.67 9.4 15.6 65.6 43.12 9.9
Diatoms 1236.8 ? 503.4 19.8 50.9 58.8 263.5 48.7
Rhizosolenia calcar-avis 593.3 ? 409.67 ? 7.1 8.7 69.4 20.1
Pseudo-nitzchia seriata ? ? 15.93 ? ? ? 95.74 ?
Cerataulina pelagica 0 ? 62.68 ? 6.3 86.98 ?
Chaetoceros pendulus 27.2 ? 18.6 5.6 19.1 20.4 4.35
Tropidoneis lepidoptera 0 ?
Other 3.4 - 0.11 - 0.1 1.8
Total 1795.5 3000 529.32 33.8 68.5 145.6 325.75 63.3
Invaders in per cent 33 95 47 77 39
These data are difficult to compare as they
obtained in different period of the year and
include different areas, but nevertheless it
shows that this invader diatoms could produce
from 40 to 95 of phytoplankton biomass.
15- I will not speak about Mnemiopsis leidyi. Not
because it is not important. - We are waiting for a new data from the region to
see what is the dynamic for it population in
terms of distribution and biomass. Only have a
new data it will be possible to make any
additional contribution to understanding of the
process of the Mnemiopsis role in the Caspian
ecosystem and it influence to Phytoplankton,
Zooplankton, Zoobenthos, and Fish Communities - .
Thank you for attention