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A comparison of vegetated and unvegetated soft-sediment macrobenthic communities in the River Yealm, south-western Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 1999

S.J. Turner
Affiliation:
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, PO Box 11–115, Hamilton, New Zealand Present address: Department of Conservation, Northern Regional Office, PO Box 112, Hamilton, New Zealand
M.A. Kendall
Affiliation:
Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, West Hoe, Plymouth, PL1 3DH

Abstract

Macrofaunal community structure was examined in a shallow sublittoral sea grass bed (Zostera marina L.) and adjacent unvegetated sediment in the River Yealm, Devon, south-west Britain, on a single sampling occasion in August 1995. The presence of Zostera had a significant influence on macrobenthic community structure in the River Yealm. Samples from inside the sea grass bed were characterized by significantly higher numbers of individuals and species, as well as by greater species richness and high faunal dominance (i.e. low evenness) compared with the unvegetated samples. High faunal dominance within the sea grass bed was attributable to the large numbers of a few species (e.g. the polychaetes juvenile capitellids, Spio filicornis, Exogone hebes, Nereis pelagica and the tanaidacean Apseudes talpa), while increased species richness was a result of a large number of additional rare (1–2 individuals) species. The greatest number of individuals was found in samples with the highest sea grass biomass. Multivariate ordination revealed a distinct separation of macrofauna communities from vegetated and unvegetated sites. Significance testing with ANOSIM shows that there were significant differences in community structure between vegetated and unvegetated habitats.

Type
SHORT COMMUNICATION
Copyright
© 1999 Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom

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