scholarly journals Growth rates of the bivalve Macoma balthica in the Wadden Sea during a period of eutrophication:relationships with concentrations of pelagic diatoms and flagellates

1990 ◽  
Vol 68 ◽  
pp. 249-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
JJ Beukema ◽  
GC Cadee
Author(s):  
A. M. Jones ◽  
Y. M. Jones

SynopsisThe general character of soft shores in this region is considered briefly. Studies of several aspects of the biology at selected sites were instigated as part of a broader monitoring programme and the results of the baseline study are described in this paper. The structure and growth of populations of Cerastoderma edule (L.) and Macoma balthica (L.) (Mollusca: Lamellibranchiata) are described. Considerable differences in C. edule growth rates were found between sites, and recruitment and survival was sporadic at many sites. The value of C. edule populations in providing some degree of ‘retrospective monitoring’ is considered. C. edule populations were found to contain significant infections of the entocommensal nemertean Malacobdella grossa: this is a new host record for M. grossa. The distribution and abundance of the macrofauna on two sandy shores are discussed in relation to environmental conditions.


1973 ◽  
Vol 30 (9) ◽  
pp. 1345-1348 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger H. Green

In an arctic intertidal environment on Hudson Bay, Macoma balthica have a higher growth rate at a tidal level of 1.1 m above mean low water than at the mean low water level, in terms of both length and dry weight. Temperature, rather than food, appears to be the primary proximate factor involved, and summer air temperatures play a major role. The estimated growth rates are comparable to reported growth rates for intertidal Macoma populations in Scotland and the Netherlands. A partial life table calculated from the death assemblage indicates that Macoma at 1.1 m above mean low water have an annual mortality which increases from about 20% at age 2 to about 50% at age 7 years.


Author(s):  
J.J. Beukema ◽  
R. Dekker

Densities and growth rates of Ensis directus (Bivalvia: Solenidae), a recent invader of the Wadden Sea, were monitored at 15 stations (12 transects and 3 squares) covering a wide range of intertidal levels and sediment types on Balgzand, a tidal-flat area in the western-most part of the Wadden Sea, during 1982–1994. In this period, recruitment was weak in all but one year (1991). Settlement took place in summer over a wide range of intertidal levels, but high survival of recruits was limited to stations below the level of mean low tides. Growth rates were also maximal at these low intertidal levels. In such areas they reached a mean length of about 6 cm in the first winter, about 12 cm in the second, and about 14 cm in the third winter. These growth rates were high compared with published records from other intertidal and shallow subtidal areas.Relatively exposed parts of the lower intertidal zone, characterized by clean sands and infrequent emersion, are a poorly occupied habitat of the Wadden Sea and offer an available niche to a new species that is well adapted to such harsh environmental conditions. In such areas, E. directus has become a dominant member of the benthos and in 1992 and 1993 reached high biomass and production values of >10 g AFDW m−2.


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