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1.
The trochid gastropod Austrocochlea constricta (Lamarck) shows a variable pattern of shell banding. The concentration of the major shell pigment, uroporphyrin I, has been shown to differ between stripe-classes and, within each stripe-class, between shores. This paper describes the relation between amount of available food and shell pigmentation on six shores.Qualitative and quantitative methods were used to determine the concentrations of chlorophyll pigments in the substratum of each shore. Thin-layer chromatography showed differences in the type of microalgae present. Quantitative, spectrophotometric determinations of the chlorophyll concentrations of acetone extracts of scrapings of the substratum showed significant differences in total chlorophyll between the six shores. A uroporphyrin index gives an estimate of the total amount of uroporphyrin/unit area on each shore, and enables the wet wt/animal, density/area, and proportions of the population in different stripe-classes to be related to the concentrations of uroporphyrin/g shell within the stripe-classes. There was a highly significant linear regression of the uroporphyrin index on total chlorophyll concentration. This provides evidence for the effect of amount of available food on shell pigmentation. The mean concentration of pigment/g shell increased as the chlorophyll content of the substratum increased.A hypothesis is proposed to explain the observed differences in banding-pattern frequencies between shores; this represents the frequency distribution of animals with different concentrations of pigment/g shell as a normal distribution, with increasing mean and standard deviation as the concentration of chlorophyll in the substratum increases. Theoretical distributions are given to show that similar banding pattern frequencies to those observed on the six shores can be produced under this hypothesis. Neither a more complex hypothesis, nor selective nor genetic mechanisms are necessary to explain the observed distributions of banding pattern in Austrocochlea.  相似文献   

2.
Marked specimens of the Malaysian cockle Anadara granosa (L.) were placed in buried cages (filled with sediment from the surrounding substratum) which were located in intertidal and subtidal environments in an area between Penang Island and mainland West Malaysia. In the majority of cockle shells examined the number of growth bands deposited was close to the number of tidal periods. Bands in the shells of intertidal animals were more strongly defined than those in shells continuously immersed. The banding pattern in shells from the subtidal environments showed narrow increments during spring tides alternating with a few wider increments during neap tides. The growth increments between bands correspond to tidal periods so they can be used to record growth rates and provide estimates of the ages of the shells. Samples of cockles collected from four sites in a commercial cockle-culture area off the coast of West Malaysia were aged. Two of the sites were located in an estuary where the cockles were periodically exposed to fluctuating salinities during the intermonsoon period. Cockles from the other two sites were situated away from the estuary and experienced full strength sea water. There was good agreement between the calculated estimates of the ages determined from the tidal bands and their known ages. Shells of cockles from the estuary had characteristically marked banding patterns which may be related to shell deposition during the intermonsoon period when the cockles were exposed to sea water of low salinity. Cockle shells collected outside the estuary did not display these patterns.  相似文献   

3.
The intertidal gastropod Phorcus sauciatus is a subtropical grazer that reaches its northern boundary in the Iberian Peninsula. Distribution of P. sauciatus along the Iberian Peninsula shows, however, gaps in its distribution. The present study was aimed at detecting possible recent changes on the population structure and distribution of P. sauciatus along the north-west Atlantic coast of the Iberian Peninsula. To achieve this aim, we adopted a qualitative sampling design to explore the presence of P. sauciatus along a region within its historical gap of distribution (north Portuguese coast). In addition, a quantitative sampling design was adopted to test hypotheses about the abundance and size structure of P. sauciatus populations among regions with different historical records of its abundance and among shores with different exposure. Results showed that P. sauciatus was present along the north Portuguese coast. However, the abundance and size structure of the newly settled populations were significantly different to those of the historically recorded populations. Moreover, P. sauciatus was able to establish populations at sheltered shores. Considering these results, we propose models for the distribution of P. sauciatus along the Iberian Peninsula, based on effects of sea surface temperature, and to explain the size-frequency of their populations based on their density.  相似文献   

4.
The performance of a species can be significantly altered by subtle changes in the physical environmental. The intertidal barnacle Balanus glandula is predominantly an open coast species in the Northeast Pacific. However, B. glandula commonly inhabits estuaries where environmental conditions such as salinity and temperature drastically differ from the open coast. We used survivorship and growth rates as a measure of performance in recently metamorphosed laboratory reared juvenile B. glandula outplanted along an environmental gradient at the mouth, mid-estuarine, and riverine end of the South Slough Estuary, Oregon, USA. Juvenile performance was highly variable over spatial and temporal scales and dependent upon existing environmental conditions. Surprisingly, along this estuarine gradient, juveniles performed better at a mid-estuarine location than at the mouth of the estuary. Typically, the riverine end of the estuary was the least suitable habitat along the estuarine gradient due to high juvenile mortality and a low growth rate. Although seasonally variable, survivorship and growth decreased with height along a vertical intertidal gradient as well. In a reciprocal transplant experiment, populations from both ends of the estuarine gradient displayed similar survivorship and growth rates. Our results demonstrate that the interactions of environmental conditions that vary temporally and spatially along a gradient strongly affect the success of an individual surviving and prospering during the early juvenile period.  相似文献   

5.
6.
In Iceland Cepaea hortensis Müll. reaches its northern limit of distribution occurring in restricted areas along the south coast. Samples of snails collected along steep cliffs in two such restricted areas were effectively monomorphic for shell colour (yellow), but were polymorphic for banding pattern and revealed strong area effects. In both localities samples from sites facing east contained varying frequencies of unbanded snails whereas in ecologically similar sites facing south unbanded were absent. In an experimental population released at a south-facing site unbanded snails failed to become established whereas banded individuals survived and bred. It is suggested that the area effects are maintained through non-visual (most likely climatic) selection though other possibilities cannot be ruled out.  相似文献   

7.
This paper considers the patterns of shell shape variation shown by Nucella canalicuata, N. emarginata and N. lamellosa from two areas of the Pacific Northwest: the shores near Friday Harbour on San Juan Island and near Bamfield on the west coast of Vancouver Island. No clear pattern of variation in association with changes in exposure was seen in either N. canaliculata or N. lamellosa . It appears that genetic influences are more important controls of shell shape than environmental selection in both these species. Nucella emarginata shows the nearest approximation to the pattern shown by the Atlantic species, N. lapillus , but only at the exposed end of the wave-action gradient. On those shores, enclaves from the most surf-washed open coast headlands have shells with proportionally larger apertures (and thus a shorter, squatter form) than their equivalents in local shelter. But, unlike in N. lapillus , the trend does not continue onto genuinely sheltered shores. Under these circumstances the species is generally rare and, where enclaves do occur, their shells are of much the same shape (although of a much larger size) as in more exposed situations.  相似文献   

8.
Benthic bivalves are important links between primary production and consumers, and are essential intermediates in the flow of energy through estuarine systems. However, information on the diet of filter feeding bivalves in estuarine ecosystems is uncertain, as estuarine waters contain particulate matter from a range of sources and as bivalves are opportunistic feeders. We surveyed bivalves at different distances from the creek mouth at the Yangtze estuarine marsh in winter and summer, and analyzed trophic dynamics using stable isotope (SI) and fatty acid (FA) techniques. Different bivalve species had different spatial distributions in the estuary. Glauconome chinensis mainly occurred in marshes near the creek mouth, while Sinonovacula constricta preferred the creek. Differences were found in the diets of different species. S. constricta consumed more diatoms and bacteria than G. chinensis, while G. chinensis assimilated more macrophyte material. FA markers showed that plants contributed the most (38.86 ± 4.25%) to particular organic matter (POM) in summer, while diatoms contributed the most (12.68 ± 1.17%) during winter. Diatoms made the largest contribution to the diet of S. constricta in both summer (24.73 ± 0.44%) and winter (25.51 ± 0.59%), and plants contributed no more than 4%. This inconsistency indicates seasonal changes in food availability and the active feeding habits of the bivalve. Similar FA profiles for S. constricta indicated that the bivalve had a similar diet composition at different sites, while different δ13C results suggested the diet was derived from different carbon sources (C4 plant Spartina alterniflora and C3 plant Phragmites australis and Scirpus mariqueter) at different sites. Species-specific and temporal and/or spatial variability in bivalve feeding may affect their ecological functions in intertidal marshes, which should be considered in the study of food webs and material flows in estuarine ecosystems.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of exposure and predation on the shell of two British winkles   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Joseph  Heller 《Journal of Zoology》1976,179(2):201-213
Changes in shell size and shell shape of the two British winkles Littorina nigrolineata and L. rudis were studied in relation to exposure and to crab-size. In both species, shells from exposed shores are smaller and more globose than those from sheltered shores. Also, in rudis of exposed shores the mouth is relatively wider. In shores of equally sheltered conditions, shells are bigger at those localities where crabs are large than at those localities where they are small. The largest shells are found in those localities where it is extremely sheltered, and the crabs are very large.
It is argued that on exposed shores, small shells are favoured because they have more possibilities than large ones to shelter in crevices and in barnacle interspaces, from the impact of winds and waves. A globose shell could accommodate more foot muscle and thus enable a stronger adherence to the rock; and an increased mouth diameter would increase the area of foot adherence to the rock. On sheltered shores, on the other hand, large, narrow-mouthed shells are favoured because they discourage crab predation, large crabs being abundant mainly on sheltered shores.
The possible significance of shell size and shape in relation to zonation is discussed, in view of the different predatory and physical conditions which prevail in different zones of the shore, and the different shell specializations which these conditions would require.  相似文献   

10.
Although extrinsic factors, such as oceanic currents and isolation induced by sea level maxima during Plio-Pleistocene glacial cycles, are often suggested as principal determinants of marine phylogeography, they are not always complete explanations. The counterexamples to predominant phylogeographic patterns in southeastern Australia suggest for example, that intrinsic factors such a habitat preference or reproductive mode can have significant influence.We collected DNA sequences from mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) and two nuclear gene introns from the Austrocochlea constricta species group to determine whether its porcata and constricta phenotypes are genetically distinguishable, to examine the phylogeographic effects of the Bassian Isthmus landbridge formed between Tasmania and Victoria during glacial maxima, and to investigate the importance of intrinsic factors in structuring its genetic variability.No fixed genetic differences between the porcata and constricta phenotypes were identified in any gene so the number of species comprised by the group cannot yet be determined. The two major clades recovered in COI analyses were respectively found principally east or west of the Bassian Isthmus. A. constricta is the first lecithotrophic or estuarine invertebrate known to show this pattern. There were no fixed differences, for any of the three genes, between specimens from estuarine and marine populations within either the eastern or western COI clades. Other intrinsic factors such as breeding period (possibly) and larval type (probably) may play roles in modulating phylogeographic patterns.  相似文献   

11.
An analysis has been made of the variation in shell shape and shell characteristics of 889 Australian and New Zealand specimens of the genus Dicathais, using multivariate techniques. Shell measurements taken were: the overall length, length of spire, length of aperture, and width of aperture. Weight of the shell plus the preserved animal was also recorded. The sculpture of the shell, thickness of the lip, and the presence or absence of a reddish or purplish colouration or banding on the inside of the lip, were assessed qualitatively.Principal component analyses of the size measurements for each site showed that the first principal component, which accounted for greater than 95% of the variation at each site, was associated with variation in the ‘size’ of the animal. Canonical analysis of the size measurements showed a cline in shell shape from the animals on the western side of Australia to those on the eastern side of Australia and New Zealand. The resulting canonical variates were associated with variation in the ‘shape’ of the shell. Principal component analyses of the between-group matrix and of the within-group matrix of the size measurements showed that the site means exhibited a similar pattern of dispersion to that of the animals within each site.Canonical analysis of the shell characteristics showed that variation along the first canonical axis was largely produced by shell sculpture, while variation along the second resulted from differences in colouration/banding.The generalized variances of the correlation matrices for the size measurements showed that groups with similar shell shape were associated with the presence of granite substrata and/or mussel beds or, alternatively, with limestone substrata, but canonical correlation analysis of the relationship between the size measurements and shell characteristics showed that no consistent trend was evident over all sites.A subjective examination of the structure of the radula of 84 animals showed that two distinct morphological forms were present, but that they were not correlated either with sex or any of the named shell forms or site groupings.An analysis of the growth curves of 27 animals of the two forms from the eastern and western coasts of Australia, held in the laboratory, was carried out. The eastern coast form showed a loss of sculpturing and a change in shell shape when kept under west coast conditions and on a mussel diet.Water temperature, diet, substratum, and degree of exposure to wave action were all found to show associations with variations in either shell shape or shell characteristics. It is suggested that the selective force of the habitat which produces changes in shell shape and shell characteristics of the animals at any site is a complex of factors, many of which are interrelated. The genetic basis for the development of shell shape and production of the shell characteristics in Dicathais may be similar to that found in Nucella lapillus (L.) in the Northern Hemisphere.These data suggest that the Dicathais found at the sites studied in this investigation are all part of the same ‘population’, the shell shape and shell characteristics of the adult populations being determined both by selection and phenotypic expressions caused by the selective force of the habitat at each site. It is concluded that the genus consists of a single highly variable species.The value of the application of multivariate analyses to this type of study is shown to lie in the way in which the techniques provide an overall picture of the variation within sites and of the variation between sites.  相似文献   

12.
We studied the populations of the dominant calanoid copepods Pseudodiaptomus annandalei and Acartia spp. in the mesohaline Danshuei Estuary for two successive springs and summers. We analyzed environmental factors (i.e., temperature, salinity, chlorophyll a, light attenuation coefficient, and suspended particulate matter) and the population densities and structures at the surface and near the estuarine bed. The population of P. annandalei dominated the zooplankton community from surface to bottom, except during a medusa bloom in 2009 and during the post-typhoon period, when Acartia spinicauda dominated. The relationships between environmental factors and densities differed between and within populations of P. annandalei and Acartia spp. We concluded that the primary determinants of the P. annandalei population are predation and the typhoon-related freshwater runoff, which can strongly influence the copepod succession in this part of the estuary.  相似文献   

13.
This study highlights the effect that estuarine polluted waters may have on adjacent coastal waters and the need of an integrated management of the coastal area. Pollution of land-to-sea water plumes varies spatially and temporally, being difficult, costly and time consuming to determine. However, the reduction in water quality of both estuarine and coastal environments and the consequent degradation of its biological communities is at issue. Chlorophyll-a analysis from water and stable nitrogen isotopic analysis (δ15N) from opportunistic macroalgae Ulva species were respectively used as proxies to detect phytoplankton proliferation and nitrogen related nutrient fluxes in the water. These analytical techniques were combined with the use of three-dimensional hydrodynamic models, and revealed to constitute reliable early warning instruments, able to identify coastal areas at risk, and supporting an integrated management of coastal and river basin areas. The approach detected synchronized δ15N signal variations along time between estuarine sites (Mondego estuary, Portugal) and nearby adjacent coastal shore sites (NE Atlantic coast). The higher values recorded by macroalgal tissues’ δ15N signals, which occurred simultaneously to higher chlorophyll-a values, were linked to the anthropogenic contamination of the water, probably related with the Mondego valley land use patterns throughout the year (reflecting the opening of sluices that drain agriculture fields). Modeling scenarios point to a Mondego’s influence that is able to reach its adjacent coastal shores in about 7 km from its river mouth. The methodology used here is replicable elsewhere and allowed to track nutrients from the source, inside the estuary, until the final area of impact, where primary producers may use those for growth, and to define vulnerable areas on adjacent coastal zones.  相似文献   

14.
In the Solent estuarine system on the central south coast of England, Zostera marina L. occurs both in mainly sublittoral beds on firm substrate around the low-water mark of spring tides, and in large eulittoral beds on mudflats between the low-water mark of neap tides and the uppermost level of the shore. Zostera noltii Hornem. occurs with eulittoral Z. marina on uppershore mudflats and also on exposed sandy shores near the low-water mark of spring tides. Since 1960 the eulittoral Zostera beds have spread widely on mudflats in Portsmouth, Langstone and Chichester Harbours, where they now occupy 430–450 ha. The Zostera beds at the bottom of the shore remain winter-green, but the mudflat Zostera beds shed most of their leaves between November and January. Comparisons are made with localities further east, which show earlier and greater leaf loss.The uppershore Zostera beds in the three harbours comprise an important and favoured autumn and early winter food for Dark-bellied Brent Geese, (Branta bernicla bernicla (L.)) and Wigeon (Anas penelope L.), which consume the leaves and rhizomes, and Teal (Anas crecca L.) which consume the seed. The pattern of occurrence of these three species of birds is, to some extent, related to the availability of Zostera.  相似文献   

15.
The evolutionary effects of glacial periods are poorly understood for Southern Hemisphere marine intertidal species, particularly obligatory sessile organisms. We examined this by assessing the phylogeographic patterns of the southern African volcano barnacle, Tetraclita serrata, a dominant species on rocky intertidal shores. Restricted gene flow in some geographical areas was hypothesized based on oceanic circulation patterns and known biogeographic regions. Barnacle population genetic structure was investigated using the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (COI) region for 410 individuals sampled from 20 localities spanning the South African coast. The mtDNA data were augmented by generating nuclear internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1) sequences from a subset of samples. Phylogenetic and population genetic analyses of mitochondrial DNA data reveal two distinct clades with mostly sympatric distributions, whereas nuclear analyses reveal only a single lineage. Shallow, but significant structure (0.0041–0.0065, P<0.01) was detected for the mtDNA data set, with the south-west African region identified as harbouring the highest levels of genetic diversity. Gene flow analyses on the mtDNA data show that individuals sampled in south-western localities experience gene flow primarily in the direction of the Benguela Current, while south and eastern localities experience bi-directional gene flow, suggesting an influence of both the inshore currents and the offshore Agulhas Current in the larval distribution of T. serrata. The mtDNA haplotype network, Bayesian Skyline Plots, mismatch distributions and time since expansion indicate that T. serrata population numbers were not severely affected by the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), unlike other southern African marine species. The processes resulting in the two morphologically cryptic mtDNA lineages may be the result of a recent historical allopatric event followed by secondary contact or could reflect selective pressures due to differing environmental conditions.  相似文献   

16.
The shell utilization patterns of two intertidal populations of the hermit crab, Pagurus longicarpus Say, were studied. The populations differed with respect to the physical characteristics of their habitats and the availability of empty gastropod shells. The first population was in an estuary connected to Narragansett Bay. This population had few, if any. empty shells available in the area. The second population was in a rock-cobble area directly on Block Island Sound. There were large numbers of empty gastropod shells available for this population. The consistently high gastropod mortality on this shore appears to be caused by the animals being washed up on the beach, where they die due to desiccation.Data from samples collected from June to November of both 1974 and 1975 showed that there were distinct differences in the shell utilization patterns of the two populations. A greater proportion of the animals collected from the estuary population inhabited damaged shells and/or shells with symbionts compared to the individuals from the population with large numbers of empty shells available.The results of shell selection experiments indicated that individuals from both populations inhabited less than preferred shells. The population with large numbers of empty shells available was qualitatively shell-limited because of the effect of physical factors on the morphology of the gastropod species of that area. In addition, the shell selection experiments showed that individuals from the two areas had significantly different shell preferences. This result may be explained by the effects of the environment on the growth rates of the hermit crabs and/or as an indication that shell preferences may vary in response to the physical factors of a given habitat.  相似文献   

17.

Background

Estuaries are highly productive ecosystems that can export organic matter to coastal seas (the ‘outwelling hypothesis’). However the role of this food resource subsidy on coastal ecosystem functioning has not been examined.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We investigated the influence of estuarine primary production as a resource subsidy and the influence of estuaries on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in coastal mollusk-dominated sediment communities. Stable isotope values (δ13C, δ15N) demonstrated that estuarine primary production was exported to the adjacent coast and contributed to secondary production up to 4 km from the estuary mouth. Further, isotope signatures of suspension feeding bivalves on the adjacent coast (Dosinia subrosea) closely mirrored the isotope values of the dominant bivalves inside the estuaries (Austrovenus stutchburyi), indicating utilization of similar organic matter sources. However, the food subsidies varied between estuaries; with estuarine suspended particulate organic matter (SPOM) dominant at Tairua estuary, while seagrass and fringing vegetation detritus was proportionately more important at Whangapoua estuary, with lesser contributions of estuarine SPOM. Distance from the estuary mouth and the size and density of large bivalves (Dosinia spp.) had a significant influence on the composition of biological traits in the coastal macrobenthic communities, signaling the potential influence of these spatial subsidies on ecosystem functioning.

Conclusions/Significance

Our study demonstrated that the locations where ecosystem services like productivity are generated are not necessarily where the services are utilized. Further, we identified indirect positive effects of the nutrient subsidies on biodiversity (the estuarine subsidies influenced the bivalves, which in turn affected the diversity and functional trait composition of the coastal sediment macrofaunal communities). These findings highlight the importance of integrative ecosystem-based management that maintains the connectivity of estuarine and coastal ecosystems.  相似文献   

18.
Over the last few decades, the period of ice cover in Hudson Bay has decreased, owing to climate warming, with breakup occurring approximately 3 weeks earlier than it did 30 years ago. The trend towards lengthening of the open water season has led to speculation that ringed seal numbers would decline, but then harbour seals might become numerous enough to replace ringed seals in the diet of polar bears. The movement patterns of 18 harbour seals equipped with satellite-linked transmitters in the Churchill River estuary (western Hudson Bay) were examined, as well as the dive behaviour of 11 of these seals. During the ice-free period, seals followed a general central place-foraging strategy, making repeated trips between their haul-out site in the Churchill River estuary and nearshore areas (<20 km) near the river mouth and estuary. Seal behaviour changed significantly as ice started to form along the coast of western Hudson Bay: animals remained significantly farther from the Churchill River haul-out site and from the coast and performed longer and deeper dives. However, throughout the entire tracking period, whether ice was present or not, all animals restricted their movements to a narrow band of shallow coastal waters (<50 m depth) along a 600-km stretch of the western Hudson Bay coastline, centred on the Churchill River estuary haul-out site. This natural self-limitation to nearshore shallow waters could restrict the potential for the population to increase in size and replace ringed seals as a primary energy resource for polar bears.  相似文献   

19.
The shell of the Common dog-whelk (Nucella lapillus (L.)) is white and unbanded at most places around the British Isles. However, high frequencies of banding occur on the Buchan coast, around Anglesey and the Menai Straits, on the Cower Peninsula, around the Devon–Somerset border in the Bristol Channel, and especially on the north Cornish coast (reaching a peak between Newquay and Padstow). The frequency of banding is significantly less in older than younger whelks in the same locality, and this change is uncorrelated with the selection against shell shape variation that takes place on exposed shores. It is concluded that banding is a pleiotropic manifestation of physiological variation, and that a study of such variation in different morphs could indicate the importance of different physiological stresses at different stages of the life history of N. lapillus.  相似文献   

20.
Populations of invading Asian shore crabs (Hemigrapsus sanguineus) and resident crabs (European green crab Carcinus maenas or species in the family Panopeidae) were monitored for up to 12 years along a south to north orientation on the open coast of Massachusetts and within the Narragansett Bay estuary, Rhode Island. At all sites, densities of resident crabs declined as H. sanguineus increased in abundance. Population dynamics were divided into 3 stages of the invasion (early, mid, late) based on statistically different densities of invading and resident crabs. Early in the invasion on the open coast, the relatively few H. sanguineus present had a wide range of individual sizes. By late in the invasion, relatively small crabs [<10 mm carapace width (CW)] constituted half of the population. Few seasonal differences occurred. Carcinus maenas, dominant at the coastal sites early in the invasion, showed strong recruitment of small individuals in the fall early in the invasion. Overall numbers of C. maenas declined as the H. sanguineus invasion progressed, and very few crabs >10 mm CW were present late in the invasion. In Narragansett Bay, a recruitment peak of H. sanguineus occurred shortly before it surged in population size, and large crabs were abundant late in the invasion. Geographic comparisons of H. sanguineus populations in southern New England showed similar growth trajectories. Monitoring populations of resident and invading species at multiple locations from early invasion through clear establishment of the invader allows a more complete understanding of the population dynamics of marine species invasions.  相似文献   

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