Mangroves: 1998
Publications
Author:
Semesi, A.K.
Title: Mangrove management and utilization in
Eastern Africa.
Publication: Ambio 27(8): 620-626, 1998.
© Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Notes: Mesocosm
experiments were conducted in the summer of 1996 to quantify the
effect of bioturbation by Carcinus maenas (the introduced
European green crab) on survival of transplanted Zostera
marina (eelgrass). The research grew out of a successful 2.52
ha eelgrass transplant project in the Great Bay Estuary of New
Hampshire. At several subtidal sites, green crabs were found to
damage transplanted eelgrass by cutting the shoots to the extent
that some sites demonstrated poor survival. In three separate
experiments, eight replicate mesocosm tanks were transplanted with
36 shoots of eelgrass, and different crab densities were
introduced into the tanks. The number of shoots damaged by crabs
was significantly higher in tanks with moderate (4.0 crabs/m(2)),
high (7.0 crabs/m(2)), or very high (15.0 crabs/m(2)) crab
densities than in tanks with low (1.0 crabs/m2) crab densities. Up
to 39% of viable shoots were lost within one week of exposure to
green crab activities. The mesocosm results demonstrated that
green crabs were not directly attracted to eelgrass but that they
significantly decreased transplant survival through their
activity. Field densities of green crabs were found to exceed the
density at which most damage occurred in the experiments,
suggesting that this introduced species can be a major determinant
of eelgrass transplant survival. The results underscore the major
influence that biological components of transplant sites can have
on transplant survival, and the need for their consideration in
the site selection process.
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