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Dispersal of Benthic Meiofauna by Wave and Current Action in Bogue Sound, North Carolina, USA
Authors:George M  Hagerman Jr Reinhard M  Rieger
Institution:Gibbs &Cox. Inc., 1235 Jefferson Davis Highway, Arlington, VA 22202, USA;Marine Sciences Program, University of North Carolina, 12-5 Venable Hall 045A, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA.
Abstract:Abstract. Results from sediment trap experiments in Bogue Sound, North Carolina, indicate that meiofauna from a wide variety of taxa and benthic habitats are regularly suspended in the subtidal water column. Interstitial species are estimated to account for 10–30 % of the suspended meiofauna. Measurements of suspended nematode concentrations, when compared with wind and current velocity records, suggest that in Bogue Sound, shoaling and breaking waves are more important than tidal currents in controlling meiofauna erosion and deposition. Linear regression analysis indicates that 80% (r = 0.907) of the variation in suspended nematode density is correlated with changes in the mean onshore-offshore component of local wind velocity. Nematode turnover associated with spring and summer coastal wind patterns is estimated to be several hundred animals per m2per day. Once suspended, meiofauna may be carried up to 10 km per day by residual currents in the Sound. Although erosion, transport and deposition of benthic nematodes by wave and current action appears to provide an effective means of dispersal along continental coastlines, the high settling velocity of nematodes suspended in Bogue Sound (on the order of 10-4m s-1) suggests that net downward flux in shelf and slope waters probably prevents their dispersal across ocean basins by surface currents.
Keywords:Meiofauna  dispersal mechanisms  W-Atlantic  Zoogeography
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