Abstract

Annual monitoring of the benthic fauna living at the Frisian Front (southern North Sea) has shown a tenfold decrease in the dominant brittlestar Amphiura filiformis in 1993–1995. In search of evidence that this decline was caused by a change in benthic food supply, we analysed variations in the shell growth of the bivalve Mya truncata from the Frisian Front during the period of interest. For this purpose, the widths of the internal growth bands in the chondrophore of M. truncata were standardised and assigned to calendar years. Averaging the yearly band width in the period 1985–2000 among 25 individuals revealed low growth rates in 1986 and 1992. Growth of M. truncata quickly recovered after 1992, while A. filiformis densities remained at low levels. Moreover, the 1986 dip in M. truncata growth had no equivalent in A. filiformis density. We conclude that there is no direct coupling between fluctuations in density of A. filiformis and variations in growth of M. truncata. The data we collected during this study on the size and spatial distribution of M. truncata are discussed in the light of plans for the protection and conservation of long-lived benthic organisms in the North Sea.

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