IMIS

Publications | Institutes | Persons | Datasets | Projects | Maps | Infrastructure
[ report an error in this record ] Print this page

Oyambre estuary restoration (N Spain)
Citation
Galván C, Ramos E, Puente A, Juanes J A (2025). Oyambre estuary restoration (N Spain). Version 1.7. IHCantabria. Samplingevent dataset. https://ipt.vliz.be/upload/resource?r=oyambre&v=1.7. https://marineinfo.org/doc/dataset/8970

Access data
Archived data
Availability: Creative Commons License This dataset is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Description

This dataset contains information on the abundance and biomass of benthic invertebrates from the Oyambre Estuary (Cantabria, northern Spain). Sampling was conducted between 2010 and 2019 at eight stations distributed along the estuary, with variable sampling frequency over the study period. 

The data were collected as part of the project "Ecological Monitoring of La Rabia Estuary in the Oyambre System," designed to assess ecological responses to hydrodynamic, morphological, and environmental changes resulting from the reopening of water channels under the new bridges of La Rabia and El Capitán estuary arms. The ecological monitoring was carried out in parallel with physical surveys to evaluate the progress of the estuarine restoration process.

more

Introduction: The reopening of tidal channels beneath the new bridges over the La Rabia and El Capitán estuary arms was expected to generate significant hydrodynamic, morphological, and ecological changes in the Oyambre estuary. The recovery of the estuary’s physical structure and functionality largely determines its ecological evolution. Therefore, ecological monitoring, conducted in parallel with the assessment of physical changes, is essential to evaluate the restoration process and to develop operational protocols that optimize future restoration outcomes. The restoration of the Oyambre estuary affects multiple components of the estuarine ecosystem that are closely interrelated and strongly dependent on habitat characteristics. Ecological restoration, therefore, seeks a holistic recovery of both structural and functional aspects of the system. Evaluating this recovery requires a long-term, systematic study of benthic fauna, as well as the relationship between biological variations and changes in physical habitat properties (hydrodynamics, water and sediment quality, morphology, etc.). Monitoring programs of this kind provide essential information for designing effective restoration projects. They form the basis of adaptive management, enabling the identification of specific interventions needed to achieve ecological objectives and to guide evidence-based decision-making.


Getting Started: The evolution of benthic macroinvertebrate communities was assessed through sampling at eight stations distributed along three transects within La Rabia estuary arm and one transect within El Capitán estuary arm. These transects were selected to capture different environmental gradients resulting from the restoration of tidal flow (e.g.: upstream penetration of saline water and the downstream movement of fluvial water; changes in tidal range and inundation frequency behind the bridge). At each transect, two sampling stations were established at different intertidal levels (upper and lower). Each station was sampled using a 1,250 cm² corer. All organisms were identified to the lowest possible taxonomic level, counted, and weighed. The temporal resolution varies along the years. 


Purpose: The main purpose of this study is to monitor the natural ecological evolution of the Oyambre estuary (La Rabia and El Capitán estuary arms) following the modification of the a road bridge. The monitoring program aims to evaluate the progress of estuarine restoration after the reestablishment of tidal flow and to assess the ecological response of the system. The results will support adaptive management and provide guidance for future restoration projects, ensuring that ecological, hydrodynamic, and morphological objectives are achieved efficiently.


Lineage
Prior to publication data undergo quality control checked which are described in https://github.com/EMODnet/EMODnetBiocheck?tab=readme-ov-file#understanding-the-output

Scope
Themes:
Biology > Benthos, Biology > Invertebrates
Keywords:
Marine/Coastal · Bio-geographical regions · Biota · Environment · Geoscientific Information · Habitats and biotopes · Local · Metadata non conformant · Metadata not evaluated · No limitations to public access · Oceans · Sea regions · WGS84 (EPSG:4326) · XYZ ASCII · EurOBIS calculated BBOX · Cabo Oyambre

Geographical coverage
EurOBIS calculated BBOX Stations
Bounding Box
Coordinates: MinLong: -4,329; MinLat: 43,3716 - MaxLong: -4,3113; MaxLat: 43,3859 [WGS84]
Cabo Oyambre [Marine Regions]

Temporal coverage
18 February 2010 - 30 July 2019

Parameters

Abundance of biological entity specified elsewhere per unit area of the bed [BODC] (EurOBIS harvested data)
Area of sample {sampled area} from the bed [BODC] (EurOBIS harvested data)

Contributors
University of Cantabria; Environmental Hydraulics Institute (IH Cantabria), moredata creator

Related datasets
Published in:
EurOBIS: European Ocean Biodiversity Information System, more


Dataset status: Completed
Data type: Data
Data origin: Monitoring: field survey
Release date: 2025-10-17
Metadatarecord created: 2025-12-16
Information last updated: 2026-04-27
All data in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) is subject to the VLIZ privacy policy