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Disturbance,emigration, and refugia: How the mud snail,Ilyanassa obsoleta (Say), affects the habitat distribution of an epifaunal amphipod,Microdeutopus gryllotalpa (Costa)
Authors:Theodore H DeWitt  Jeffrey S Levinton
Institution:Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY, 11794, U.S.A.
Abstract:In the presence of the mud snail Ilyanassa obsoleta (Say), the tubicolous amphipod Microdeutopus gryllotalpa (Costa) emigrates to snail-free sediments, as demonstrated in laboratory and field experiments. Emigration occurs predominantly in the dark when the amphipod is most active. Unlike crevices, the thickness of sediments in which the amphipod is established offers no protection from snail disturbance. Emigration is shown to be caused by the disturbance generated by the snail's plowing and burrowing across the sediment surface, and not a response to a reduction in the shared microfloral food supply. The crawling and burrowing of the smaller mud snail, Hydrobia totteni Morrison, does not disturb Microdeutopus, supporting the hypothesis that relative body sizes affects the ability of bioturbators/burrowers to disturb tube-dwellers. As the burrows of Microdeutopus extend only ≈2 cm below the sediment surface, thick mud layers do not offer any refuge from Ilyanassa. However, very small solid surfaces (≈1–2 mm in relief) to which the amphipods build tubes do provide some protection from Ilyanassa. In soft-sediment benthic communities, such small structures may provide significant refuge for small epifauna and shallow burrowing infauna escaping from small-scale, biogenic disturbance.
Keywords:disturbance  migration  refugia  habitat selection  benthic ecology  epifauna  amphipods  gastropods  Long Island Sound
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