This study investigated postlarval dispersal of soft-bottom macrofauna at a spatially complex intertidal mudflat comprising patches of bare sediment and an ecosystem engineer, the mussel Mytilus edulis. At each of four sites in Guard Point Cove, Maine, USA, we took core samples and deployed bedload traps in bare sediment and mussel bed habitats to estimate ambient densities, rates of sediment flux, and several measures of postlarval dispersal. Univariate and multivariate nonmetric multidimensional scaling (nMDS) results showed few significant site effects and no habitat×site interactions. In contrast, there were numerous significant habitat effects. Compared to the bare sediment, the mussel bed habitat had: fewer species; higher ambient den...
In intertidal soft-bottom ecosystems, ecosystem engineers such as reef-building bivalves, can strong...
International audiencePost-settlement dispersal is a key process in the recruitment of bivalves. To ...
Suspension-feeding bivalves produce biodeposits (faeces and pseudofaeces) that have much higher sink...
Mussels (Mytilus edulis L.) are unusual because they thrive in both rocky shore and soft-bottom habi...
Field and modelling studies of the distribution of mussel larvae and juvenile plantigrade mussels in...
Variation in recruitment is known to affect species demography and population dynamics. There is sca...
Increasing evidence shows that spatial interactions between sedentary organisms can structure commun...
Bedload and water column traps were used with simultaneous wind and water velocity measurements to s...
Mussel colonization is assumed to result from factors affecting recruitment and post-recruitment sur...
It is not known whether and by what factors spatial heterogeneity in mussels (Mytilus edulis L.) aff...
In contemporary ecosystems, organisms are increasingly confronted with suboptimal living conditions....
Mytilus edulis L. density was manipulated in a New England soft-bottom intertidal population, and th...
Unionoid mussels are considered keystone species due to their ability to modify and link pelagic, be...
Many soft-bottom benthic invertebrates display sediment-associated patterns of dispersion. Habitat s...
Ecosystem engineers can modify habitat, creating structural microhabitats. This structural complexit...
In intertidal soft-bottom ecosystems, ecosystem engineers such as reef-building bivalves, can strong...
International audiencePost-settlement dispersal is a key process in the recruitment of bivalves. To ...
Suspension-feeding bivalves produce biodeposits (faeces and pseudofaeces) that have much higher sink...
Mussels (Mytilus edulis L.) are unusual because they thrive in both rocky shore and soft-bottom habi...
Field and modelling studies of the distribution of mussel larvae and juvenile plantigrade mussels in...
Variation in recruitment is known to affect species demography and population dynamics. There is sca...
Increasing evidence shows that spatial interactions between sedentary organisms can structure commun...
Bedload and water column traps were used with simultaneous wind and water velocity measurements to s...
Mussel colonization is assumed to result from factors affecting recruitment and post-recruitment sur...
It is not known whether and by what factors spatial heterogeneity in mussels (Mytilus edulis L.) aff...
In contemporary ecosystems, organisms are increasingly confronted with suboptimal living conditions....
Mytilus edulis L. density was manipulated in a New England soft-bottom intertidal population, and th...
Unionoid mussels are considered keystone species due to their ability to modify and link pelagic, be...
Many soft-bottom benthic invertebrates display sediment-associated patterns of dispersion. Habitat s...
Ecosystem engineers can modify habitat, creating structural microhabitats. This structural complexit...
In intertidal soft-bottom ecosystems, ecosystem engineers such as reef-building bivalves, can strong...
International audiencePost-settlement dispersal is a key process in the recruitment of bivalves. To ...
Suspension-feeding bivalves produce biodeposits (faeces and pseudofaeces) that have much higher sink...