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Ecological Consequences of the Tsunamis Caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake and Subsequent Disturbance Events in a Shallow Brackish Lagoon in Sendai Bay, Japan

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Ecological Impacts of Tsunamis on Coastal Ecosystems

Part of the book series: Ecological Research Monographs ((ECOLOGICAL))

Abstract

The impacts of the tsunami caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake and subsequent disturbance events were examined in Gamo Lagoon, a shallow brackish lagoon in Sendai Bay, Japan. A major tsunami with a height of 7.2 m struck the lagoon on 11 March 2011, followed by a 2-month estuary closing and a typhoon-induced flood within a year. These events induced drastic changes in the salinity and sediment characteristics as well as a washout of vegetation. After the tsunami, the plant community was characterized chiefly by the proliferation of “pioneer species.” The annual helophyte Suaeda maritima became dominant in the bare high-tide zone created through the disappearance of the reed marsh. Sand dune vegetation (SDV) had recovered only in patchily after 4 years, and the community was characterized by the invasive species Cakile edentula. The density and species richness of macrozoobenthos changed after each disturbance event (i.e., the tsunami, estuary closing, and typhoon). Macrozoobenthic density recovered within 6 months after the tsunami and typhoon, chiefly due to the density overshoots of several opportunistic taxa. Though tsunami- and typhoon-induced changes in macrozoobenthic community structure were significant, by 3 years post-tsunami, the community had begun to recover toward pre-tsunami conditions. These results emphasize both the vulnerability and resiliency of estuarine biotic communities against large pulsed disturbance events.

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Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the students in our laboratories at Tohoku University, as well as K. Kinoshita, H. Maki, H. Misui, Y. Nakamura, A. Oishi, and the staff at the Marine Biological Research Institute of Japan Co., Ltd. for their help in the field and in the laboratory. We also thank Dr. J. Urabe and Dr. S. Shikano for allowing us to use their laboratory facilities. In 2007 and 2008, part of the survey was conducted together with the Miyagi Prefecture monitoring program. The research was partly supported by NIES and Tohoku Ecosystem-Associated Marine Sciences (TEAMS).

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Kanaya, G., Suzuki, T., Kanou, K., Kondoh, T., Sato-Okoshi, W., Kikuchi, E. (2016). Ecological Consequences of the Tsunamis Caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake and Subsequent Disturbance Events in a Shallow Brackish Lagoon in Sendai Bay, Japan. In: Urabe, J., Nakashizuka, T. (eds) Ecological Impacts of Tsunamis on Coastal Ecosystems. Ecological Research Monographs. Springer, Tokyo. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-56448-5_7

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