Impact of fiddler crab foraging and tidal inundation on an intertidal sandflat: season-dependent effects in one tidal cycle
Abstract
Intertidal sandflats inhabited by fiddler crabs are ideal systems in which to study the effects of physical and biological processes. This study addressed two questions: (1) Do fiddler crab feeding and tidal inundation have measurable effects on the sandflat over one tidal cycle? (2) Does the sandflat change over the course of a year? In field exclusion/inclusion experiments, fiddler crabs reduced sediment organic content by 40%, Chlorophyll a levels by 20% and meiofaunal density by 60% in one tidal cycle. Effects were most pronounced in the spring when organic content and meiofaunal densities were maximal. Effects of foraging were not erased by the tide and accumulated over time. The sandflat had highest levels of all variables in spring and minimal levels during summer and fall. Crabs graze the sandflat to minimum levels in the spring. Due to crab foraging, the flat is barren during the summer and fall, and recovers during the winter when crabs are minimally active.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
- Pub Date:
- January 2004
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.jembe.2004.06.003
- Bibcode:
- 2004JEMBE.313....1R
- Keywords:
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- Fiddler crab;
- Foraging/predation;
- Meiofaunal density;
- Sandflat ecology;
- Seasonal dynamics;
- Uca pugilator