INVESTIGADORES
IRIBARNE Oscar Osvaldo
artículos
Título:
Combined engineering effects of clams and crabs on infaunal assemblages and food availability in intertidal systems
Autor/es:
ALVAREZ, FERNANDA; ADDINO, M.; IRIBARNE O; BOTTO, F
Revista:
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Editorial:
INTER-RESEARCH
Referencias:
Lugar: Oldendorf/Luhe; Año: 2015 vol. 540 p. 57 - 71
ISSN:
0171-8630
Resumen:
In soft sediments, ecosystem engineers (EEs) may play key roles in modifying habitatsand therefore affecting bottom-assemblage species. In the southwestern Atlantic mud flats,2 EEs coexist: the stout razor clam Tagelus plebeius and the burrowing crab Neohelice (Chas -magnathus) granulata. Clams create small depressions (i.e. millimeters), while crabs build largeburrows (i.e. centimeters) generating crab beds covering many hectares. We hypothesized thatthese differences in the bioturbation scale may have different consequences for infaunal assemblages.We found that (1) microscale sediment-surface heterogeneities created by clams (e.g.holes and surrounding depressions) were related to higher organic-matter content and micro -phytobenthic biomass (measured as chlorophyll a), (2) abundances of meiofaunal groups (copepods,ostracods, and nematodes) were higher in clam holes than outside at all tidal levels, and (3)habitats with a more heterogeneous structure?such as clam holes inside a crab bed?had ahigher food availability and an abundance of several meiofaunal groups (e.g. ostracods, and principallynematodes). Large-scale bioturbation (crab-bed formation) also affected primary producers,infaunal assemblages, and clam distribution, because at the highest intertidal levels clamswere absent outside the crab beds. Our results thus demonstrate the differential effects of 2 contrastingEEs on the organization of soft-bottom communities and the key role of microheterogeneitiesin adding specific structures to already modified systems on a larger scale