Life span bias explains live–dead discordance in abundance of two common bivalves

Paleobiology ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 783-797 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelly E. Cronin ◽  
Gregory P. Dietl ◽  
Patricia H. Kelley ◽  
Stewart M. Edie

AbstractLife span bias potentially alters species abundance in death assemblages through the overrepresentation of short-lived organisms compared with their long-lived counterparts. Although previous work found that life span bias did not contribute significantly to live–dead discordance in bivalve assemblages, life span bias better explained discordance in two groups: longer-lived bivalve species and species with known life spans. More studies using local, rather than global, species-wide life spans and mortality rates would help to determine the prevalence of life span bias, especially for long-lived species with known life spans. Here, we conducted a field study at two sites in North Carolina to assess potential life span bias between Mercenaria mercenaria and Chione elevata, two long-lived bivalve species that can be aged directly. We compared the ability of directly measured local life spans with that of regional and global life spans to predict live–dead discordance between these two species. The shorter-lived species (C. elevata) was overrepresented in the death assemblage compared with its live abundance, and local life span data largely predicted the amount of live–dead discordance; local life spans predicted 43% to 88% of discordance. Furthermore, the global maximum life span for M. mercenaria resulted in substantial overpredictions of discordance (1.4 to 1.6 times the observed live–dead discordance). The results of this study suggest that life span bias should be considered as a factor affecting proportional abundances of species in death assemblages and that using life span estimates appropriate to the study locality improves predictions of discordance based on life span compared with using global life span estimates.

Paleobiology ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 543-567 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank K. McKinney

Study of the assemblage of encrusting organisms on co-occurring disarticulated valves of the bivalves Crassostrea virginica and Mercenaria mercenaria in Bogue Sound, North Carolina, indicates that there is little or no substrate specificity among the encrusting organisms but that the shape of the shells has an important influence on how extensively members of each higher taxon collectively inhabit the shells. Encrusting bryozoans, a dense low mat composed of many species from diverse phyla, and a unicellular film cover most of the area of both exterior and interior surfaces. The encrusting bryozoans most extensively cover both surfaces of C. virginica but are in second place behind the multispecies mat on exterior surfaces of M. mercenaria and behind the unicellular film on its interior surfaces. These differences are inferred to result from different physical stability of valves of the two bivalve species, which exhibit different frequencies of circumrotatory growth.Degradation of the assemblage by sodium hypochlorite, to simulate loss of organic matter during fossilization, results in the complete loss of encrusting sponges, erect hydrozoans, erect bryozoans, and ascidians. Loss of these taxa results in overexposure and more apparently uniform distribution of skeletal taxa with respect to their surface representation in living assemblages and also in complete loss of the higher tiers present in the living assemblage. However, indications of the original structural organization of the living assemblage is indicated by preservation of the most abundant taxa in the lower tiers and by the retention in the reduced treated assemblage of the patterns of distribution that characterized the living assemblage.


2004 ◽  
Vol 34 (11) ◽  
pp. 2394-2398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phillip J. van Mantgem ◽  
Nathan L Stephenson

We assess the potential of increment coring, a common method for measuring tree ages and growth, to contribute to mortality. We used up to 21 years of annual censuses from two cored and two uncored permanent plots in the Sierra Nevada of California, to detect changes in mortality rates 12 years following coring for individuals >5 cm DBH from two coniferous species, Abies concolor (Gordon & Glend.) Lindl. (white fir) and Abies magnifica A. Murr. (red fir). Using a randomized before-after control impact (BACI) design, we found no differences in mortality rates following coring for 825 cored and 525 uncored A. concolor and 104 cored and 66 uncored A. magnifica. These results support the view that collecting tree cores can be considered nondestructive sampling, but we emphasize that our 12-year postcoring records are short compared with the maximum life-span of these trees and that other species in different environments may prove to be more sensitive to coring.


1998 ◽  
Vol 39 (10) ◽  
pp. 1989-1994 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reinald Pamplona ◽  
Manuel Portero-Otín ◽  
David Riba ◽  
Cristina Ruiz ◽  
Joan Prat ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 78 (4) ◽  
pp. 223-229
Author(s):  
Mark Jones ◽  
Gregory D. Kearney ◽  
Xiaohui Xu ◽  
Tammy Norwood ◽  
Scott K. Proescholdbell

2014 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Givemore Munhenga ◽  
Basil D Brooke ◽  
Belinda Spillings ◽  
Leyya Essop ◽  
Richard H Hunt ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. 325-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.M. Ford ◽  
P.M. Nollen ◽  
M.A. Romano

AbstractMiracidia of Echinostoma caproni were exposed to solutions varying in salinity, pH, and temperature in 1 ml concavity slides. Half-lives of the miracidial populations were determined and longevity curves constructed to find maximum life spans of the miracidia in the different conditions. Control miracidia in aquarium water at pH 7.2 and 22°C. had a half-life of 3.6 h and a maximum life span of 9 h. Miracidia of E. caproni were not very tolerant of saline solutions from 0.1% to 0.4%, the latter being lethal within an hour. A bimodal effect was found with exposure to aquarium water of varying pH, with a peak at pH 5 in acid solutions and pH 9 in alkaline solutions. Miracidia tolerated pH ranges from 3 to 11 exhibiting half-lives of 2.4 h or greater in these solutions. At lower than ambient temperatures, E. caproni miracidia lived longer, the greatest being a half-life of 5.0 h and a maximum life span of 15h at 5°C. At warmer temperatures, the half-life was reduced until lethality was reached at 40°C. ANCOVA analysis of log transformed longevity curves supported the observation that in pH trials many miracidia survived initially with a major die-off after 3.3 h. The opposite trend of early die-off and gradual mortality of the survivors was supported in the temperature trials.


1998 ◽  
Vol 854 (1 TOWARDS PROLO) ◽  
pp. 516-516 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. PAMPLONA ◽  
M. PORTERO-OTIN ◽  
D. RIBA ◽  
M. LOPEZ-TORRES ◽  
G. BARJA

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