Ibon Uriarte
University of the Basque Country
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Featured researches published by Ibon Uriarte.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2013
Fernando Villate; Arantza Iriarte; Ibon Uriarte; Lander Intxausti; Alejandro de la Sota
Seasonal and inter-annual variations of dissolved oxygen (DO) along the estuary of Bilbao were investigated from 1998 to 2008, during its rehabilitation phase from pollution, to determine whether anthropogenic or natural forcings or both govern DO dynamics and hypoxia. Both seasonal and inter-annual variations of DO were best explained by hydro-climatic factors, sewage pollution and phytoplankton dynamics in the inner, intermediate and outer estuary respectively. The most remarkable intra-decadal improvement in DO occurred in the halocline layer of the intermediate estuary, where the factor that best explained these changes was sewage pollution abatement. However, in the estuarine hotspot for hypoxia, i.e. inner estuary bottom waters, no parallel response to sewage pollution abatement was observed and hydro-climatic factors were the main drivers of inter-annual DO variations. Differences in the degree of stratification and flushing accounted for this differential response of DO to anthropogenic and climate-related forcings at both axial and vertical scales.
Marine Biodiversity Records | 2016
Aitor Albaina; Ibon Uriarte; Mikel Aguirre; David Abad; Arantza Iriarte; Fernando Villate; Andone Estonba
BackgroundThe introduction of NIS to estuaries and coastal embayment is of great concern. Commercial ships’ ballast water discharge and the northwards progression of species due to the ongoing climate change arise as the main factors explaining the rising occurrence of NIS species in Northern Atlantic waters. In this regard, regular monitoring of the plankton communities is paramount as to be able to respond properly to this potential issue.ResultsWhile monitoring the invasive copepod Acartia tonsa populations in the estuaries of Bilbao and Urdaibai (Basque country, Spain), we report here the Asian copepod Pseudodiaptomus marinus for the first time in the Iberian Peninsula waters. Individuals from both species were collected from July to October, 2013 for DNA sequencing of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene (MT-CO1). Phylogenetic analysis of MT-CO1 confirmed P. marinus identity.ConclusionsPhylogeographic distribution of A. tonsa haplotypes in Europe along with the Bilbao port traffic patterns suggested a secondary invasion from an European source to Basque estuaries. The successful establishment of the A. tonsa population and the appearance of Pseudodiaptomus marinus confirm the need for regular plankton monitoring of estuarine and port waters. This applies also to nearby systems as these populations could represent a source of future dispersal.
Estuaries and Coasts | 2015
Arantza Iriarte; Fernando Villate; Ibon Uriarte; Lara Alberdi; Lander Intxausti
Dissolved oxygen dynamics in estuarine and coastal environments are complex and highly variable, which highlight the need to compile information from many different types of estuaries. Small estuaries where euhaline habitats dominate are particularly ill represented in the literature. As a contribution to fill this gap, a study on dissolved oxygen dynamics was conducted in the small estuary of Urdaibai (inner Bay of Biscay). Spatial and temporal variations in the percentage saturation of dissolved oxygen (DO-saturation) along the salinity gradient of the estuary and the role of hydro-climatic factors and eutrophication as drivers of those variations at seasonal and inter-annual time scales were analyzed (period 1998–2008). DO-saturation showed an inner to outer estuary increasing gradient. DO-saturation below the salinity gradient layer was either significantly higher than or not significantly different from that in the salinity gradient layer. DO-saturation showed summer minima, but hypoxia was rarely observed. At the outermost estuary, seasonal variations of DO were small and it is hypothesized that DO dynamics were governed mainly by tidal exchange and turbulence. In the intermediate and inner estuary, seasonal variations of DO-saturation were best explained by river discharge, and to a lesser extent by chlorophyll a and temperature, each factor gaining relevance in different periods of the year. In intermediate and inner zones, river discharge exerted a positive effect on DO-saturation, likely via an increase in the renewal rate of DO. At the inter-annual time scale, unlike at the seasonal scale, temperature did not show a significant negative relationship with DO-saturation.
Journal of Plankton Research | 2017
Alvaro Fanjul; Fernando Villate; Ibon Uriarte; Arantza Iriarte; Angus Atkinson; Kathryn Cook
Zooplankton abundance series (1999–2013) from the coastal sites of Bilbao 35 (B35), Urdaibai 35 (U35), Plymouth L4 (L4) and Stonehaven (SH), in the Northeast Atlantic were compared to assess differences in the magnitude of seasonal, interannual and residual scales of variability, and in patterns of seasonal and interannual variation in relation to latitudinal location and trophic status. Results showed highest seasonal variability at SH consistent with its northernmost location, highest interannual variability at U35 associated to an atypical event identified in 2012 in the Bay of Biscay, and highest residual variability at U35 and B35 likely related to lower sampling frequency and higher natural and anthropogenic stress. Interannual zooplankton variations were not coherent across sites, suggesting the dominance of local influences over large scale environmental drivers. For most taxa the seasonal pattern showed coherent differences across sites, the northward delay of the annual peak being the most common feature. The between-site seasonal differences in spring–summer zooplankton taxa were related mainly to phytoplankton biomass, in turn, related to differences in latitude or anthropogenic nutrient enrichment. The northward delay in water cooling likely accounted for between-site seasonal differences in taxa that increase in the second half of the year.
Oceanological and Hydrobiological Studies | 2016
Arantza Iriarte; Fernando Villate; Ibon Uriarte; Santiago Arranz
Abstract The effect of climate variability on estuarine water environments was assessed in two systems of the Bay of Biscay, the estuaries of Bilbao and Urdaibai, with contrasting morphology, hydrodynamic features and anthropogenic influence. To that purpose, the main time scales of variability in relevant environmental factors were established along spatial salinity gradients and, using a combination of multivariate and regression analyses, the contribution of each factor to the total variability, as well as the influence of climate factors in the seasonal and inter-annual estuarine environment variations were assessed. The major seasonal modes of variability in the water environments of both estuaries were accounted for by water temperature together with salinity stratification and/or chlorophyll a. This seasonal variability was associated with climate variability, as shown by the relationship with air temperature and river flow. The major inter-annual modes of variability were also accounted for by water temperature, along with dissolved oxygen and/or chlorophyll a in Bilbao, and chlorophyll a and/or transparency in Urdaibai. These were also associated with climate variability, in this case summer air temperatures. Water quality variables, such as dissolved oxygen and transparency, were found to be sensitive to reveal the effect of long term anthropogenic activities.
Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2010
Elvira Morote; M.P. Olivar; Fernando Villate; Ibon Uriarte
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2004
Ibon Uriarte; Fernando Villate
Fisheries Oceanography | 2010
M. Pilar Olivar; Mikhail Emelianov; Fernando Villate; Ibon Uriarte; Ignacio Álvarez; Elvira Morote
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2008
Elvira Morote; M. Pilar Olivar; Patricia M. Pankhurst; Fernando Villate; Ibon Uriarte
Journal of Plankton Research | 2005
Ibon Uriarte; Fernando Villate