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Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial and Temporal Structure in a Temperate Intertidal Community, with Special Emphasis on Gemma Gemma (Pelecypoda: Mollusca)

Roger H. Green, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 6, pp 999-1011
TLDR
In the region of Barnstable Harbor, Massachusetts, 67 species of larger invertebrates were found in 3 faunal associations characteristic of different tide levels, and in three of the four species studied, spatial variation in density and rate of density change was significantly higher at the 60—cm location than at the 90-cm location.
Abstract
In the region of Barnstable Harbor, Massachusetts, 67 species of larger invertebrates were found in 3 faunal associations characteristic of different tide levels. The number of species per sample was highest at the intermediate tide level. Temperatures of sediments and densities of several species were followed for a year at two intertidal levels (60 cm and 90 cm above mean low water). Temperature variation was lower at the 60—cm level than at the 90—cm level at all times of the year, and at both levels was higher in spring than at any other time of the year. In three of the four species studied, spatial variation in density and rate of density change was significantly higher at the 60—cm location than at the 90—cm location. The mortality rate for adult G. gemma was higher at 60 cm (where density was lower) than at 90 cm, while the reverse was true for young—of—year. Release of young began sooner in the spring at 90 cm than at 60 cm. The growth rate of G. gemma at Barnstable Harbor was much lower than that reported at Union Beach, New Jersey, although at both places virtually all growth took place in summer. At Barnstable Harbor the maintenance requirements were 20—30 times higher in summer than in early spring. The Q10 within the temperature range 5—20°C was 4.1. G. gemma at 90 cm had less time to feed than at 60 cm, but had higher requirements for population maintenance because of an older age structure and a higher density. The growth rate of G. gemma was higher at 90 cm than at 60 cm.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Distributions and population structures of two intertidal estuarine polychaetes in the lower St. Lawrence Estuary, with special reference to environmental factors

TL;DR: The spatial distribution of Nereis virens parallels depth contours and may reflect its ability to inhabit environments which become more physically unstable in an offshore-onshore direction, consistent with a model whereby larvae are recruited in the upper intertidal zone and juveniles migrate downshore.
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Relationships between Tidal Oscillations and Ruddy Turnstone Flocking, Foraging, and Vigilance Behavior

TL;DR: Turnstones feed on invertebrates close inshore and on crabs farther out on the flat, where the latter were more abundant as discussed by the authors, and foraging velocity increased until low tide and then decreased.
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The diets of juvenile horseshoe crabs, Tachypleus tridentatus and Carcinoscorpius rotundicauda (Xiphosura), from nursery beaches proposed for conservation in Hong Kong

TL;DR: The obtained data suggest that juvenile horseshoe crabs of both species are selective benthic feeders and subsist mainly on insect larvae, polychaetes, oligochaete, small crabs and thin-shelled bivalves.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxygen consumption by the bivalve Donax vittatus (da Costa)

TL;DR: Differences in values of the constant ( a ) in the regression equation suggest that there is some acclimation to temperature, resulting in rotation of the rate/temperature curve counterclockwise for warm-acclimated animals, and a reduction of Q 10 in cold-acClimated animals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of the spatial variability in abundance and age structure of two infaunal bivalves, Cerasto-derma edule and C. lamarcki, using hierarchical sampling programs

TL;DR: Spatial variability in abundance and age distnbution of 2 infaunal bivalves were quantified using hierarchical sampling programs and showed that for both species a spatial unit contained significantly fewer year classes and the most abundant year class was significantly more abundant than expected by chance.