The Macroinvertebrate Fauna Associated with the Mud Flats of the Gulf of Maine

Mud flats are a dominant habitat in the Gulf of Maine and are of significant economic and ecological importance to the region. This communication describes the macroinvertebrate fauna (> 1.0 mm) of five representative mud flats along 300 km of coastline in the central and northern Gulf of Maine....

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Main Authors: Larsen, Peter F, Doggett, Lee F
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Journal of Coastal Research 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.fcla.edu/jcr/article/view/78465
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spelling ftfloridaclaojs:oai:ojs.journals.fcla.edu:article/78465 2023-05-15T17:45:41+02:00 The Macroinvertebrate Fauna Associated with the Mud Flats of the Gulf of Maine Larsen, Peter F Doggett, Lee F 2012-06-05 application/pdf http://journals.fcla.edu/jcr/article/view/78465 eng eng Journal of Coastal Research http://journals.fcla.edu/jcr/article/view/78465/75871 Journal of Coastal Research; Vol 7, No 2 (1991): Journal of Coastal Research 0749-0208 Geoscience; Geography; Ocean Science; Oceanography; Marine Science; Coastal Geology; Earth and Environmental Sciences Gulf of Maine; intertidal studies; fine-grained flats; mud flats; macroinvertebrate fauna info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2012 ftfloridaclaojs 2016-11-23T12:02:12Z Mud flats are a dominant habitat in the Gulf of Maine and are of significant economic and ecological importance to the region. This communication describes the macroinvertebrate fauna (> 1.0 mm) of five representative mud flats along 300 km of coastline in the central and northern Gulf of Maine. Arthropods and annelids were the most diverse taxa encountered, but annelids and molluscs were the numerical dominants. Numbers of species at each site ranged from 19 to 43. Density ranged from 624 to over 52,000 individuals m -2 with an overall mean of 7,345 m -2. Numerical analyses showed that the mud flats of the Gulf of Maine are numerically dominated by a few widely distributed, deposit-feeding species. This is in contrast to previous results of sand flat and sand beach investigations which manifested faunistic heterogeneity and distinct community partitioning, respectively, over the same geographical range. The most characteristic mud flat taxa include oligochaetes, the molluscs Hydrobia truncata and Macoma balthica, the polychaetes Streblospio benedicti and Nereis virens and the amphipod Corophium volutator. With the exception of S. benedicti, these species are characteristic of similar environments in northwestern Europe and, with the exception of C. volutator which has a very limited distribution in the western hemisphere, they are also widely distributed in the northwest Atlantic. Article in Journal/Newspaper Northwest Atlantic Florida Online Journals (FloridaOJ)
institution Open Polar
collection Florida Online Journals (FloridaOJ)
op_collection_id ftfloridaclaojs
language English
topic Geoscience; Geography; Ocean Science; Oceanography; Marine Science; Coastal Geology; Earth and Environmental Sciences
Gulf of Maine; intertidal studies; fine-grained flats; mud flats; macroinvertebrate fauna
spellingShingle Geoscience; Geography; Ocean Science; Oceanography; Marine Science; Coastal Geology; Earth and Environmental Sciences
Gulf of Maine; intertidal studies; fine-grained flats; mud flats; macroinvertebrate fauna
Larsen, Peter F
Doggett, Lee F
The Macroinvertebrate Fauna Associated with the Mud Flats of the Gulf of Maine
topic_facet Geoscience; Geography; Ocean Science; Oceanography; Marine Science; Coastal Geology; Earth and Environmental Sciences
Gulf of Maine; intertidal studies; fine-grained flats; mud flats; macroinvertebrate fauna
description Mud flats are a dominant habitat in the Gulf of Maine and are of significant economic and ecological importance to the region. This communication describes the macroinvertebrate fauna (> 1.0 mm) of five representative mud flats along 300 km of coastline in the central and northern Gulf of Maine. Arthropods and annelids were the most diverse taxa encountered, but annelids and molluscs were the numerical dominants. Numbers of species at each site ranged from 19 to 43. Density ranged from 624 to over 52,000 individuals m -2 with an overall mean of 7,345 m -2. Numerical analyses showed that the mud flats of the Gulf of Maine are numerically dominated by a few widely distributed, deposit-feeding species. This is in contrast to previous results of sand flat and sand beach investigations which manifested faunistic heterogeneity and distinct community partitioning, respectively, over the same geographical range. The most characteristic mud flat taxa include oligochaetes, the molluscs Hydrobia truncata and Macoma balthica, the polychaetes Streblospio benedicti and Nereis virens and the amphipod Corophium volutator. With the exception of S. benedicti, these species are characteristic of similar environments in northwestern Europe and, with the exception of C. volutator which has a very limited distribution in the western hemisphere, they are also widely distributed in the northwest Atlantic.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Larsen, Peter F
Doggett, Lee F
author_facet Larsen, Peter F
Doggett, Lee F
author_sort Larsen, Peter F
title The Macroinvertebrate Fauna Associated with the Mud Flats of the Gulf of Maine
title_short The Macroinvertebrate Fauna Associated with the Mud Flats of the Gulf of Maine
title_full The Macroinvertebrate Fauna Associated with the Mud Flats of the Gulf of Maine
title_fullStr The Macroinvertebrate Fauna Associated with the Mud Flats of the Gulf of Maine
title_full_unstemmed The Macroinvertebrate Fauna Associated with the Mud Flats of the Gulf of Maine
title_sort macroinvertebrate fauna associated with the mud flats of the gulf of maine
publisher Journal of Coastal Research
publishDate 2012
url http://journals.fcla.edu/jcr/article/view/78465
genre Northwest Atlantic
genre_facet Northwest Atlantic
op_source Journal of Coastal Research; Vol 7, No 2 (1991): Journal of Coastal Research
0749-0208
op_relation http://journals.fcla.edu/jcr/article/view/78465/75871
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