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Status of Biodiversity in the Baltic Sea

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TLDR
Although in comparison with fully marine areas the Baltic Sea supports fewer species, several facets of the system's diversity remain underexplored to this day, such as micro-organisms, foraminiferans, meiobenthos and parasites, and climate change and its interactions with multiple anthropogenic forcings are likely to have major impacts on the Baltic biodiversity.
Abstract
The brackish Baltic Sea hosts species of various origins and environmental tolerances. These immigrated to the sea 10,000 to 15,000 years ago or have been introduced to the area over the relatively recent history of the system. The Baltic Sea has only one known endemic species. While information on some abiotic parameters extends back as long as five centuries and first quantitative snapshot data on biota (on exploited fish populations) originate generally from the same time, international coordination of research began in the early twentieth century. Continuous, annual Baltic Sea-wide long-term datasets on several organism groups (plankton, benthos, fish) are generally available since the mid-1950s. Based on a variety of available data sources (published papers, reports, grey literature, unpublished data), the Baltic Sea, incl. Kattegat, hosts altogether at least 6,065 species, including at least 1,700 phytoplankton, 442 phytobenthos, at least 1,199 zooplankton, at least 569 meiozoobenthos, 1,476 macrozoobenthos, at least 380 vertebrate parasites, about 200 fish, 3 seal, and 83 bird species. In general, but not in all organism groups, high sub-regional total species richness is associated with elevated salinity. Although in comparison with fully marine areas the Baltic Sea supports fewer species, several facets of the system's diversity remain underexplored to this day, such as micro-organisms, foraminiferans, meiobenthos and parasites. In the future, climate change and its interactions with multiple anthropogenic forcings are likely to have major impacts on the Baltic biodiversity.

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Transitions in bacterial communities along the 2000 km salinity gradient of the Baltic Sea

TL;DR: This study reports a first detailed bacterial inventory from vertical profiles of 60 sampling stations distributed along the salinity gradient of the Baltic Sea, one of world's largest brackish water environments, generated using 454 pyrosequencing of partial (400 bp) 16S rRNA genes.
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Studies of the effects of microplastics on aquatic organisms: What do we know and where should we focus our efforts in the future?

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A census of marine biodiversity knowledge, resources, and future challenges.

TL;DR: A global review of gaps in marine biodiversity knowledge and resources is overdue because society and many scientists believe the authors have discovered most species, or that doing so is out of fashion except when new technologies are employed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Population diversity and the portfolio effect in an exploited species

TL;DR: Five decades of data are used to provide the first quantification of portfolio effects that derive from population and life history diversity in an important and heavily exploited species to demonstrate the critical importance of maintaining population diversity for stabilizing ecosystem services and securing the economies and livelihoods that depend on them.
Book

Meiobenthology: The Microscopic Motile Fauna of Aquatic Sediments

Olav Giere
TL;DR: This paper presents a retrospective review on Meiobenthology and Outlook on New Approaches and Future Research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dispersal and emerging ecological impacts of Ponto-Caspian species in the Laurentian Great Lakes.

TL;DR: Impacts of these benthic invaders vary with site: in some shallow areas, habitat changes and the Dreissena → round goby → piscivore food chain have improved conditions for certain native game fishes and waterfowl; in offshore waters, DreissENA is competing for settling algae with the native amphipod Diporeia spp.
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