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Structure of the bivalve (Mollusca) assemblage of Mazatlan bay, Mexico, and its relationship to environmental variables
Esqueda-González, M.C.; Ríos Jara, E.; Galván-Villa, C.M.; Rodríguez-Zaragoza, F.A. (2022). Structure of the bivalve (Mollusca) assemblage of Mazatlan bay, Mexico, and its relationship to environmental variables. Community Ecol. 23(3): 349-364. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42974-022-00112-8
In: Community Ecology. Akadémiai Kiadó: Budapest. ISSN 1585-8553; e-ISSN 1588-2756, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Keywords
    Mollusca [WoRMS]
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Esqueda-González, M.C.
  • Ríos Jara, E.
  • Galván-Villa, C.M.
  • Rodríguez-Zaragoza, F.A.

Abstract
    This work describes the structure of the assemblage of bivalve mollusks (i.e., composition, abundance, density, distribution and species diversity) of four representative rocky beaches of Mazatlan bay, Mexico. Biological samples were taken in the upper intertidal, lower intertidal and shallow subtidal of the beaches together with environmental parameters: type of sediment, organic matter, water temperature, dissolved oxygen, wave exposure and concentration of chlorophyll a. A total of 19,848 individuals distributed in 77 species, 50 genera and 27 families were recorded. The permutational ANOVA and PERMANOVA indicated significant differences in the bivalve assemblage structure among environments across studied sites. However, the intertidal (IT) and SS environments had different bivalve assemblages. Six species had a broad distribution: Acar rostae, Arcopsis solida, Isognomon janus, Saccostrea palmula Chama buddiana and Carditamera affinis. Four species had the highest density in the IT: Brachidontes semilaevis (196.0 ind m2), B. adamsianus (35.0 ind m2), Arcopsis solida (18.0 ind m2) and Lithophaga aristata (15.0 ind m2), and in the SS were Lithophaga aristata (7.1 ind m2), B. semilaevis and Acar rostae (3.2 ind m2). This study shows that exposure to waves was determinant for the bivalve distribution that inhabit the intertidal zone. In contrast, chlorophyll a and organic material are the variables that best explain the distribution of the species in the SS. However, more detailed information is required regarding the importance of the interaction between the hydrodynamics and the topography of the rocky beaches of Mazatlan bay.

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