Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4551852 Marine Environmental Research 2007 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The provision of artificial shelters for the collection of crabs, known as crab-tiling, and the subsequent harvesting of the soft “peeler” crabs for angling bait, are associated with trampling disturbance of intertidal mudflats in the United Kingdom. Recovery of meiofauna communities following crab-tiling activity was investigated on an intertidal mudflat in SW England. Harvesting of experimental plots was reproduced six times over a 2-week period. Meiofauna was collected at low tides 12 h, 36 h and 144 h after treatment. Meiofaunal and nematode abundance, and nematode species number, was significantly greater in controls compared to crab-tile stations at 12 h. At 36 h and 144 h there were no significant differences between treatments, indicating recovery had occurred in 12–36 h. Multivariate analysis showed nematode assemblage composition from control plots to be significantly different from crab-tile plots at 12 h. No significant differences were observed between sediment physical parameters with treatment. Results suggest that the predominant effect of disturbance may be vibration-induced burial, which causes nematodes to bury deeper into the sediment, beyond the depth sampled, and explains the rapid recovery.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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