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The effect of plant coverage on macro- invertebrate density and diversity in the intertidal zone Sarah Park, Bailey Shuttleworth Cucinelli, James Holobow,

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Presentation on theme: "The effect of plant coverage on macro- invertebrate density and diversity in the intertidal zone Sarah Park, Bailey Shuttleworth Cucinelli, James Holobow,"— Presentation transcript:

1 The effect of plant coverage on macro- invertebrate density and diversity in the intertidal zone Sarah Park, Bailey Shuttleworth Cucinelli, James Holobow, and Jenna Shaw

2 Introduction ●Ecologically important region ●Few studies on the effects of flora on faunal biodiversity ●Goal: provide greater understanding of marine interactions

3 Indian Point

4 Green’s Point

5 Bar Road

6 Ascophyllum nodosum

7 Fucus vesiculosus

8 Polysiphonia lanosa

9 Fauna Littorina obtusataLittorina littoreaThais lapillus

10 Fauna Balanus balanoides Gammarus oceanicus

11 Invertebrate Density ●L. obtusata and G. oceanicus live in patches of seaweed ●L. littorea feed on algae ●B. balanoides and T. lapillus seek shelter from wave action ●Large and aggregated vegetation shelter greater number of invertebrates

12 Hypothesis 1: ●Amount of plant cover on intertidal regions of the Bay of Fundy is positively correlated with invertebrate density.

13 Invertebrate Biodiversity ●High biodiversity → stable and productive communities ●Schooner (1974): niche diversification/complex habitats may increase species richness ○quantify habitat complexity? ●Gunnill (1982): artificial increase and diversity may decrease with increased plant cover

14 Hypothesis 2: ●Amount of plant cover on intertidal regions of the Bay of Fundy is negatively correlated with invertebrate biodiversity.

15 Materials ●line transect ●1 m quadrat ●25 cm quadrat ●plastic collection bags for samples ●ten sites over 100 m ●constant altitude ●surface species were collected ●identified in the lab Methods

16 Results

17

18 Discussion Indian Point ● Lowest plant cover (3.9 samples/m2) ● Second largest fauna density (173.1 samples/m2) ● Second highest diversity (H’=0.307) Hypothesis 1: Not Accepted Hypothesis 2: Accepted

19 Discussion Green’s Point ● Largest plant cover (42.8 samples/m2) ● Lowest fauna density (97.2 samples/m2) ● Greatest diversity (H’=0.683) Hypothesis 1: Not Accepted Hypothesis 2: Not Accepted

20 Discussion Bar Road ● Second Highest plant cover (7.2 samples/m2) ● Largest fauna density (275.8 samples/m2) ● Lowest diversity (H’=0.088) Hypothesis 1: Accepted Hypothesis 2: Accepted

21 Sources of Error hard to distinguish holdfasts in high density of plants distance from the water’s edge was not measured inconsistent tide phase time restriction

22 Conclusion - Our study did not produce concrete results - Overall data is inconsistent - Multiple factors (abiotic/biotic) influence invertebrate density/diversity.


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