Recovery of meiofauna communities following mudflat disturbance by trampling associated with crab-tiling.

Mar Environ Res

Marine Biology and Ecology Research Centre, Marine Institute, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth PL4 8AA, UK.

Published: October 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • Crab-tiling, a method of providing artificial shelters for soft "peeler" crabs, disrupts intertidal mudflats due to trampling disturbances in the UK.
  • A study on meiofauna communities in SW England showed that their recovery from crab-tiling disturbances occurs within 12 to 36 hours after harvesting.
  • While nematode abundance was significantly lower in disturbed areas within the first 12 hours, recovery was noted beyond that timeframe, suggesting that the main impact is from vibration-induced burial affecting nematode behavior.

Article 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 12h, 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 12h. 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 12h. 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.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2007.03.002DOI Listing

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