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Title
Distributional overlap rather than habitat differentiation characterizes co-occurrence of bivalves in intertidal soft sediment systems
Author(s)
Compton T.J., Troost T.A., Van Der Meer J., Kraan C., Honkoop P.J.C., Rogers D.I., Pearson G.B., De Goeij P., Bocher P., Lavaleye M.S.S., Leyrer J., Yates M.G., Dekinga A., Piersma T.
Published
2008
Publisher
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.3354/meps07732
Abstract
Diverse species assemblages are often associated with a diversity of habitat structures. Sedimentary systems seem to be no exception, as within sedimentary systems benthic species diversity within a sample point appears to correlate with sediment grain size complexity. However, it remains to be shown whether total benthic species diversity relates to a system's sediment heterogeneity across multiple systems. In the present paper we examined whether bivalve diversity is associated with: (1) sediment heterogeneity across systems and (2) sediment grain size complexity within systems, at 9 temperate and tropical tidal flat systems. Although bivalve life-history strategies, like post-settlement habitat selection, might suggest that sediment heterogeneity should be important for bivalve species, bivalve diversity and sediment heterogeneity were not associated across systems. Interestingly, the association between total benthic diversity and sediment heterogeneity was also not significant, suggesting that changing species composition across systems does not account for the lack of a correlation between bivalve diversity and sediment heterogeneity. Instead of habitat differentiation, bivalve diversity within a sample point was highest in 'complex' fine-grained sediments and bivalve distributions showed a large degree of distributional overlap in all systems. The results of this study at both smaller and larger spatial scales suggest that coexistence between bivalve species in diverse tidal flats is not associated with increased sediment heterogeneity. © Inter-Research 2008.
Keywords
benthos; bivalve; coexistence; community composition; grain size; habitat selection; habitat structure; life history theory; species diversity; Bivalvia
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PUB11941