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Diversity and structure of epifaunal communities on mollusc valves,Buzzards Bay,Massachusetts
Authors:Egbert G Driscoll  Ruth A Swanson
Institution:1. Wayne State University, Detroit, Mich. U.S.A.;2. The Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass. U.S.A.
Abstract:The diversity, homogeneity and population structure of epifauna living on dead bivalve shells in a shallow marine bay are examined. Twenty-eight shells of Mercenaria mercenaria were artificially emplaced on each of three different sediment types in Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, for one year. Living faunas (53,000 individuals assignable to 106 species) and preservable faunas (16,000 individuals assignable to 25 species) which colonized these shells are compared.Living epifaunas demonstrate a moderately good fit to the Preston truncated lognormal distribution but deviate consistently from the MacArthur broken-stick model. Homogeneity and diversity of living faunas are greater on shells resting on coarse sediments. The rarefaction methodology overestimates faunal diversity in both living and preservable faunas.Preservable epifaunas posses a higher homogeneity but one which is generally parallel to that of the living communities from which they are derived. The diversity of preservable epifaunas does not reflect the diversity of the living faunas from which they are derived.Abundant species living on shells are more likely to possess preservable hard parts than are rare species. This is indicative of the evolutionary success of various protective devices in epibenthic communities exposed to predation and environmental vagaries.
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