Introduced Species: 2003 Publications
Neideman, R.,
Wenngren, J., and Olafsson, E. Competition between the introduced
polychaete Marenzelleria sp and the native amphipod Monoporeia
affinis in Baltic soft bottoms. Marine Ecology
Progress Series 264: 49-55, 2003.
© Inter-Research
Notes: The
North American spionid polychaete Marenzelleria cf. viridis was
reported from the Baltic Sea for the first time in 1985. The species has
spread rapidly and now dominates many soft-bottom communities, where it
dwells in burrows down to 30 cm deep in the sediment. In the Baltic Sea,
below 10 m water depth, the macrobenthic community is composed of only
a handful of species, among which the amphipod Monoporeia affinis is
a key member. This species is highly mobile; it swims actively at night
but remains burrowed in the sediment during the day. Due to similarities
in feeding mode and sympatric occurrence, the polychaete may compete with
the amphipod for both food and space. One plausible outcome of interactions
between the 2 species is that the amphipod, the more mobile species, would
avoid areas where the more sessile polychaete is present in high numbers.
In the laboratory, we tested the hypothesis that, if given the choice,
the amphipod avoids burrowing in sediment with high polychaete abundances.
The amphipod burrowed in significantly lower numbers in patches with high
polychaete abundance compared to those with lower abundance. Also, plastic
tubes mimicking polychaete body structure were not avoided by the amphipods,
indicating that the physical tube structure of the polychaetes does not
explain the amphipod's choice of burrowing site. Furthermore, the amphipod
did not increase or prolong swimming activities as a function of higher
worm density, indicating that increased swimming activity over dense polychaete
patches and subsequent migration away from them is not a likely explaination
of why this amphipod burrow less frequently in patches of high polychaete
abundance.
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