Benthic foraminifera from the South China Sea were studied to assess mass m
ortality and to monitor the composition and recovery of the benthic communi
ties following the 1991 Mt Pinatubo ashfall. Surface distribution data from
monitoring stations in the eastern South China Sea that were occupied duri
ng four cruises between spring 1994 and summer 1998 display the following t
rends in recolonization patterns: (1) Suspension feeding epifaunal benthic
foraminifera (i.e. Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi, Saccorhiza ramosa) and large
xenophyophores (i.e. Syringammina (?)fragilissima) were absent in spring 1
994 and only rare individuals were observed in June 1996, but in larger num
bers in December 1996 and in summer 1998. Then, they were important recolon
izers of the ash layer. (2) Diversity and population densities have changed
significantly since 1994. Following an abundance maximum in winter 1996, t
he numbers of living individuals in summer 1998 decreased again and the dee
p sea benthic foraminiferal community started to return to a normal ecologi
cal structuring. However, infaunal foraminifera were still strongly dominat
ed by several species of the genus Reophax. We interpret the changing abund
ance and diversity pattern during the recolonization process in two ways: (
1) the markedly increasing activity of burrowing macrofauna observed since
1998 opened new ecological niches for infaunal benthic foraminifera but als
o intensified predator pressure; (2) competitive interactions within the re
colonizing fauna began to play a major role. Opportunistic pioneer species,
characterized by rapid reproduction rates and the capability to colonize d
isturbed environments, were outcompeted by non-opportunistic species. (C) 2
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