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Intertidal distribution of infauna in a central California lagoon: the role of seasonal blooms of macroalgae
Authors:Richard A Everett  
Institution:

1 Department of Zoology, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA

2 Bodega marine Laboratory, Bodega Bay, California, USA

Abstract:This study examined the roles of seasonal blooms of green algae, Ulva expansa (Setchell) Setchell et Gardner, and biotic disturbance by burrowing ghost shrimp, Callianassa gigas Dana, and foraging rays, on the intertidal distributions of a phoronid, Phoronopsis viridis Hilton, and a tellinid bivalve, Macoma nasuta (Conrad). Algal removal experiments in 1984 and 1986 demonstrated that heavy seasonal algal cover in the lower zone significantly reduced the abundances of both Phoronopsis and Macoma. Growth of Macoma transplanted into the algal zone was significantly lower in plots with algal cover than in plots regularly cleared of algae. Algal cover did not significantly affect early recruitment of either Phoronopsis or Macoma. Neither ghost shrimp nor rays appeared to reduce the abundances of phoronids or clams, although ray disturbance did result in a significant increase in the proportion of phoronids regenerating dorsal body parts. These results indicate that seasonal algal blooms are capable of producing discrete patterns of infaunal distribution in intertidal sedimentary habitats.
Keywords:Algal-infaunal interaction  Intertidal distribution  Macoma nasuta  Macroalgal bloom  Phoronopsis viridis  Ulva expansa
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