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Article 2

Temporal variability of a subtropical intertidal meiofaunal assemblage: contrasting effects at the species and assemblage-level

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R. Riera1*, J. Núñez2, M. Del Carmen Brito2, F. Tuya3,4
1 Centro de Investigaciones Medioambientales del Atlántico (CIMA SL), Arzobispo Elías Yanes 44,38206 La Laguna, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain
2 Benthos Lab, Department of Animal Biology, University of La Laguna, 38206 La Laguna, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain
3 BIOGES, Universidad de Las Palmas de G.C., 35017 Las Palmas, Canary Islands, Spain
4 Center for Marine Ecosystem Research, Edith Cowan University, Joondalup 6027, Western Australia, Australia
* corresponding author: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Abstract . – Meiofaunal assemblages were sampled monthly at an intertidal beach (Los Abrigos del Porís, Tenerife, Canary Islands) during one year (May 2000-April 2001). We aimed (1) to determine whether patterns in the assemblage structure, total meiofaunal abundance, and the abundance of the most common species, followed a temporal pattern, and (2) to assess if three environmental variables (grain size, organic content and total nitrogen) affected the meiofaunal assemblage structure throughout this annual cycle. The five most abundant taxa (the copepod Ectinosomatidae sp.1, the polychaete Microphthalmus pseudoaberrans, the turbellarian Catenulida sp.3 and the nematodes Enoplolaimus propinquus and Theristus sp.) showed significant differences in abundance throughout the study period. However, the total abundance and assemblage structure of meiofauna did not changed throughout the study period. The contribution of measured environmental variables to explain variation in meiofaunal assemblage structure was considerably low. Consequently, the study of meiofaunal patterns through time can reach contrasting results when patterns are evaluated at the species or assemblage-level: individual species can counterbalance their abundances to mask patterns at the assemblage-level.

You are here: Volume 61 (2011) Issue 3 Article 2
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