@article {4800, title = {Food resources of the bivalve Astarte elliptica in a sub-Arctic fjord: a multi-biomarker approach}, journal = {Marine Ecology Progress Series}, volume = {567}, year = {2017}, pages = {139-156}, abstract = {

ABSTRACT: It is generally agreed that pelagic-benthic coupling is tight on Arctic shelves, i.e. that organic matter produced in the surface layers supports the seafloor and benthos. However, this paradigm is mainly based on the assumption that phytoplankton and ice algae are the main sources of carbon for the benthic communities. Climate change is expected to alter the relative contribution of food sources for benthic organisms. Macroalgal biomass is predicted to increase in near-shore systems in response to increased temperature and reduced sea ice cover. Thus, a better understanding of the relative contribution of benthic and pelagic components in benthic food webs in the Arctic is needed. In this study, a multi-biomarker approach (stable isotopes, fatty acid trophic markers, and compound-specific stable isotope analysis) was applied to link potential sources of carbon, including particulate organic matter from subsurface and bottom waters, sediment organic matter, and 6 macroalgal species to the diet of the bivalve Astarte elliptica collected below the euphotic zone in a sub-Arctic fjord (Kobbefjord, Greenland). Results showed that A. elliptica feeds on particulate and sediment organic matter and that brown macroalgae significantly support the Arctic benthic food web. Multi-biomarker approaches can be used to determine the diet of benthic organisms and track temporal variability in sources of food. It therefore appears to be an interesting method to study food regime strategies in response to changing primary production dynamics.

}, author = {Gaillard, B and Tarik Meziane and R{\'e}jean Tremblay and P Archambault and Blicher, M E and Laurent Chauvaud and Rysgaard, S and Fr{\'e}d{\'e}ric Olivier} } @article {4269, title = {Influence of intertidal recreational fisheries and {\textquoteleft}bouchot{\textquoteright} mussel culture on bivalve recruitment}, journal = {Marine Environmental Research}, volume = {117}, year = {2016}, pages = {1 - 12}, abstract = {

Abstract In coastal environments, fishing and aquaculture may be important sources of disturbance to ecosystem functioning, the quantification of which must be assessed to make them more sustainable. In the Chausey Archipelago, France, recreational fishing and commercial shellfish farming are the only two evident anthropogenic activities, dominated by bivalve hand-raking and {\textquoteleft}bouchot{\textquoteright} mussel culture, respectively. This study evaluates the impact of both activities on bivalve recruitment dynamics by comparing primary recruitment intensity (short-term effect) and recruitment efficiency (medium-term effect) by sampling bivalves in reference (undisturbed) and disturbed (i.e. subjected to hand-raking or in {\textquoteleft}bouchot{\textquoteright} mussel culture areas) parcels throughout and at the end of the recruitment season, respectively. Specific hypotheses evaluated were that (H1) bivalve hand-raking negatively affects bivalve recruitment and that (H2) {\textquoteleft}bouchot{\textquoteright} mussel culture promotes bivalve recruitment. Patterns in bivalve community structure in reference parcels (i.e. natural pattern) differed between initial and final recruitment, underlining the great importance of early post-settlement processes, particularly secondary dispersal. Primary recruitment intensity was inhibited in hand-raking parcels whereas it was promoted in {\textquoteleft}bouchot{\textquoteright} mussel culture parcels, but the effect on recruitment efficiency was muted for both activities due to post-settlement processes. Nevertheless, the importance of effects that occur during the first step of recruitment should not be ignored as they may affect bivalve communities and induce immediate consequences on the trophic web through a cascade effect. Finally, it is highlighted that hand-raking damages all life stages of the common cockle Cerastoderma edule, one of the major target species, suggesting that this activity should be managed with greater caution than is currently done.

}, keywords = {{\textquoteleft}Bouchot{\textquoteright}}, issn = {0141-1136}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2016.03.006}, url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0141113616300319}, author = {Nicolas Toupoint and Pierrick Barbier and R{\'e}jean Tremblay and P Archambault and Christopher W. McKindsey and Gesche Winkler and Tarik Meziane and Fr{\'e}d{\'e}ric Olivier} } @article {4676, title = {A new species and four new records of sedentary polychaetes from the Canadian High Arctic}, journal = {Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom}, year = {2016}, month = {007}, pages = {1-10}, abstract = {

During ArcticNet surveys aboard {\textquoteleft}CCGS Amundsen{\textquoteright} in 2011, several subtidal stations located in Canadian Archipelago were sampled in order to study the composition of their benthic communities. Among the abundant material sampled, several specimens of rare polychaete species were found. Examination of this material showed four species not previously recorded in the area, and a new species described herein. Descriptions of these specimens are given in this work. Ophelina brattegardi Kongsrud et al., 2011 is characterized by a body composed of 27{\textendash}28 chaetigers, by having the parapodia of the last four chaetigers shifted to the ventral side of the body, and by lacking branchiae in mid-body chaetigers. Macrochaeta polyonix Eliason, 1962 is unique within the genus in having several (instead of one or two) compound neurochaetae in anterior parapodia. Chaetozone acuta Banse \& Hobson, 1968 is characterized by having spines from anterior third of the body and arranged in bundles composed of " $\#$ "just a few chaetae. Chaetozone jubata Chambers \& Woodham, 2003 can be distinguished from similar species by having very long capillary chaetae from chaetiger 2 or 3. Finally, Dialychone hervyae n. sp. is characterized by bearing four pairs of radioles with narrow flanges, by the bilobed tip of its first peristomial ring that projects beyond the collar, and by the paleate thoracic notochaetae bearing long mucros.

}, doi = {10.1017/S0025315416000953}, url = {https://www.cambridge.org/core/article/div-class-title-a-new-species-and-four-new-records-of-sedentary-polychaetes-from-the-canadian-high-arctic-div/3950848DE7205A141D2159F4FA91FDA2}, author = {Eduardo Lopez and Fr{\'e}d{\'e}ric Olivier and Cindy Grant and P Archambault} } @article {3982, title = {Dietary tracers in Bathyarca glacialis from contrasting trophic regions in the Canadian Arctic}, journal = {Marine Ecology Progress Series}, volume = {536}, year = {2015}, month = {09/2015}, pages = {175-186}, keywords = {Bathyarca glacialis, Bivalve, Canadian Arctic Archipelago, FATMs, Fatty acid trophic markers, Non-methylene-interrupted fatty acid, Pelagic {\textendash} benthic coupling}, author = {Gaillard, B and Tarik Meziane and R{\'e}jean Tremblay and P Archambault and Layton, KKS and Martel, AL and Fr{\'e}d{\'e}ric Olivier} }