A functional and morphological approach to evaluate the vertical migration of estuarine intertidal nematodes during a tidal cycle

Image credit: Marco C Brustolin

Abstract

We tested herein the hypothesis that exposure time significantly contributes to the vertical distribution profile of nematodes during a tidal cycle as a function of distinct feeding and locomotion behaviors, conditioned by body morphology. We showed that the vertical distribution profile of the slender with filiform tail, numerically dominant Terschellingia longicaudata is in fact significantly correlated with sediment changes induced by tidal variation. Conversely, none of the other nematode species showed unequivocal evidence of vertical migration. Horizontal spatial heterogeneity also influenced the vertical distribution of nematode associations, probably as a response to varying temperature and desiccation levels at the sediment surface. The resulting vertical profiles for individual or species groups are a trade-off among locomotory and feeding strategies and concordant morphological adaptations.

Publication
Helgoland Marine Research, 67(1):83-96

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Marco C Brustolin
Marco C Brustolin
Research Fellow

My research interests include numerical ecology, disturbance/diversity relationships and metacommunity dynamics. Pronouns he/him.

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