Do Natural Changes Mask Artificial Impacts on Benthic Ecosystem Over a Period of Time?

International Marine Minerals Society
R. Sharma B. Nagender Nath A. B. Valsangkar P. A. Loka Bharathi B. S. Ingole N. H. Khadge S. Jai Sankar
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
4
File Size:
164 KB
Publication Date:
Oct 15, 2007

Abstract

After the simulated ‘mining’ experiment (INDEX) in the Central Indian Ocean (in 1997); the restoration of benthic environment was monitored for 4 years (2001-2005) at 5 locations in and around the test site and at 3 reference stations (20-80 km) from the test site. A comparison of long-term monitoring data with the pre-mining and post mining observations has shown that: • The concentration of silt fraction which was the highest (50-60%) at most locations during ‘pre-mining’ and ‘post-mining’ phases, had reduced (40-50%) during monitoring phases. • There was a corresponding increase in clay concentration (50-60%) during the monitoring phase, implying change in the size of sediment particles settling on the seabed, a trend that was also observed at the reference locations. • The initial increase in water content and decrease in shear strength after the experiment, which appeared to be returning to normal in monitoring-1 (2001), was reversed during subsequent monitoring phases (2002-2005), indicating changes in benthic environmental conditions. • Sediment organic matter and pore-water chemical data have not only indicated partial restoration of geochemical properties after the experiment, but also cyclic changes during the monitoring period.
Citation

APA: R. Sharma B. Nagender Nath A. B. Valsangkar P. A. Loka Bharathi B. S. Ingole N. H. Khadge S. Jai Sankar  (2007)  Do Natural Changes Mask Artificial Impacts on Benthic Ecosystem Over a Period of Time?

MLA: R. Sharma B. Nagender Nath A. B. Valsangkar P. A. Loka Bharathi B. S. Ingole N. H. Khadge S. Jai Sankar Do Natural Changes Mask Artificial Impacts on Benthic Ecosystem Over a Period of Time?. International Marine Minerals Society, 2007.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account