Littoral environments are highly productive systems that commonly face intense anthropogenic pressures. Polychaete sabellariid (Annelida) reef ecosystems play crucial roles in coastal environments by providing essential habitat, sustaining biodiversity, mitigating erosion and, thus, conveying valuable ecosystem services. Despite their ecological importance, these sedentary organisms and their physiological state are poorly studied, representing a real gap for assessing ecosystem health and resilience. This study aims at providing valuable baseline data by investigating size-related variations in antioxidant defense mechanisms and energy metabolism in the reef-building polychaete Sabellaria spinulosa (Leuckart, 1849). Specimens were collected from veneer-type bioconstructions growing along the northern Adriatic coast of Italy (Mediterranean Sea) during spring seasons in a two-year field survey. We analyzed key enzymatic biomarkers in adult specimens of S. spinulosa characterized by different sizes. Small-size individuals displayed higher activities of antioxidant enzymes (CAT, GPx, SOD, GSR, and GST) and pyruvate kinase (PK). Conversely, larger specimens exhibited elevated phosphofructokinase (PFK) activity, indicating a metabolism probably more prone to energy storage and stress resilience. The consistency of the observed enzymatic patterns across two sampling years highlights robust, size-dependent physiological differences in S. spinulosa. By establishing this clear physiological baseline, our findings underscore the suitability of this species as a sentinel for environmental monitoring. Its widespread distribution allows for largescale comparative assessments, while its ecological tolerance enables the detection of the sub-lethal stress responses that are crucial for early-warning biomonitoring programs.

Characterizing antioxidant defense and energy metabolism proxies in a neglected Mediterranean ecosystem engineer: Sabellaria spinulosa (Leuckart, 1849)

Lo Bue, Giusto
Investigation
;
Mancin, Nicoletta
Project Administration
2025-01-01

Abstract

Littoral environments are highly productive systems that commonly face intense anthropogenic pressures. Polychaete sabellariid (Annelida) reef ecosystems play crucial roles in coastal environments by providing essential habitat, sustaining biodiversity, mitigating erosion and, thus, conveying valuable ecosystem services. Despite their ecological importance, these sedentary organisms and their physiological state are poorly studied, representing a real gap for assessing ecosystem health and resilience. This study aims at providing valuable baseline data by investigating size-related variations in antioxidant defense mechanisms and energy metabolism in the reef-building polychaete Sabellaria spinulosa (Leuckart, 1849). Specimens were collected from veneer-type bioconstructions growing along the northern Adriatic coast of Italy (Mediterranean Sea) during spring seasons in a two-year field survey. We analyzed key enzymatic biomarkers in adult specimens of S. spinulosa characterized by different sizes. Small-size individuals displayed higher activities of antioxidant enzymes (CAT, GPx, SOD, GSR, and GST) and pyruvate kinase (PK). Conversely, larger specimens exhibited elevated phosphofructokinase (PFK) activity, indicating a metabolism probably more prone to energy storage and stress resilience. The consistency of the observed enzymatic patterns across two sampling years highlights robust, size-dependent physiological differences in S. spinulosa. By establishing this clear physiological baseline, our findings underscore the suitability of this species as a sentinel for environmental monitoring. Its widespread distribution allows for largescale comparative assessments, while its ecological tolerance enables the detection of the sub-lethal stress responses that are crucial for early-warning biomonitoring programs.
2025
Environment/Ecology is a broad category covering interrelated disciplines. It includes resources dealing with pure and applied ecology, ecological modelling and engineering, ecotoxicology, and evolutionary ecology. In environmental science, some of the many areas covered are environmental contamination and toxicology, environmental health, monitoring, technology, geology, and management. Other fields covered are soil science and conservation, water resources research and engineering, climate change, and biodiversity conservation. Regional naturalist resources are also covered here.
Esperti anonimi
Inglese
Internazionale
ELETTRONICO
593
152135
10
Reef-building polychaetes, SEM morphology, Bioconstruction, Mediterranean Sea, Biochemical indicators
6
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Lo Bue, Giusto; Ciacci, Caterina; Burattini, Sabrina; Frontalini, Fabrizio; Santos-Simón, Mar; Mancin, Nicoletta
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/1531355
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