Environmental Impact of Brine from Desalination Plants on Marine Benthic Diatom Diversity

Kleopatra Grammatiki, Niek F. de Jonge, J L Nielsen, Bettina Scholz, Eleni Avramidi, Myrsini Lymperaki, M Hesselsøe, Frithjof Kuepper* (Corresponding Author)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Benthic diatoms are sensitive indicators of environmental conditions at the seabed. In this study, benthic diatom communities at two brine outfall sites of reverse osmosis (RO) seawater desalination plants in Larnaca and Dhekelia, Cyprus, were investigated using a classical, microscopy-based approach and environmental DNA metabarcoding. In general, the diversity of diatoms measured by both methods (microscopy and eDNA metabarcoding), increased by distance from the brine discharge. Increased TOC and nutrient enrichment at brine outfalls contributed to decreased diatom diversity at the Larnaca outfalls, but the diatom diversity at Dhekelia was not driven by abiotic factors. The diatom communities at the outfalls were shown to be distinct and showed temporal variation across the sampling seasons with eDNA metabarcoding, but this was the case only for Dhekelia with microscopy. The results highlight the effect of local biogeography and different brine mixing methods on diatom diversity. The results revealed that conventional morphological methods and eDNA metabarcoding rarely provide identical results. However, the complementary results emphasise that more information can be derived when combining the methods for biodiversity impact assessments.
Original languageEnglish
Article number107207
JournalMarine Environmental Research
Early online date6 May 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 6 May 2025

Bibliographical note

We are also grateful to representatives of competent authorities in Cyprus providing logistics and laboratory support, especially the Department of Fisheries & Marine Research, Ministry of Agriculture, Natural Resources & Environment and the Civil Aviation Authority. We would also like to thank Pieter van West (Univ. Aberdeen) for useful discussions within the framework of his role as co-supervisor of KG’s PhD, as well as Spyros Sfenthourakis at the University of Cyprus, Nicosia.

Open Access via the Elsevier agreement

Data Availability Statement

The raw sequencing data generated for this study will be made available at the European Nucleotide Archive under project number PRJEB79159 upon publication.

Keywords

  • Brine
  • Cyprus
  • desalination
  • marine diatoms
  • DNA metabarcoding
  • environmental impact

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