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The importance of sandflat morphology to recruitment of the intertidal snail Nassarius pauperatus during ten consecutive years at three sites in South Australia
Authors:S C McKillup  A J Butler  R V McKillup
Institution:(1) Department of Zoology, University of Adelaide, G.P.O. Box 498, 5001 Adelaide, South Australia, Australia;(2) Present address: Department of Biology, University of Central Queensland, 4702 Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia
Abstract:This project was desinged to confirm the temporal consistency of inter-site differences in recruitment of an intertidal gastropod, and to test the hypothesis that these differences are accounted for by differences in shore topography. Annual recruitment of the intertidal sanil Nassarius pauperatus (Lamarck) was estimated at two sandflats in Gulf St Vincent, South Australia, over a period of 12 yr (1979 to 1990). At one sandflat the gradient was slight, the zone containing N. pauperatus was wide, and there were extensive pools of water at low tide, whilst at the other sandflat the gradient was steeper, the zone containing N. pauperatus was narrower, and there were fewer or no pools. Although recruitment at both sites varied temporally, the density of recruits was always higher at the first site. These data, together with data covering 10 yr (1981–1990) from a sandflat where the gradient of the substratum was decreasing due to accretion of sediment, suggest that shore topography is an important determinant of relative recruitment for N. pauperatus in South Australia.
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