Abstract

Macrobenthic invertebrates are an important food source for higher trophic levels in freshwater and marine habitats, yet the importance of predation impacting regular seasonal changes in macrobenthos abundance remains unclear. Benthic invertebrates and transient marine species in temperate estuaries display inverse patterns of seasonal abundance, suggesting a link between predation and summer macrobenthos abundance minima. We conducted manipulative caging experiments to test the importance of predation by white shrimp ( Litopenaeus setiferus) in regulating estuarine subtidal macrobenthos densities. We predicted greater declines in macrobenthos densities with increased shrimp densities due to predation rather than disturbance and macrobenthos emigration. Using these field and laboratory data, we estimate whether white shrimp predation can significantly contribute to the macrobenthos seasonal abundance minima observed in long-term monitoring data. White shrimp predation was measured in the field using 7-d predator enclosure/exclusion experiments. Within the uppermost 0–2 cm of sediment, total macrobenthos densities decreased within shrimp enclosure cages using 12 or 36 shrimp m − 2 . Laboratory experiments distinguished between the effects of shrimp predation versus shrimp disturbance and macrobenthos emigration. Shrimp predation significantly reduced macrobenthos densities, while effects of shrimp disturbance and macrobenthos emigration were not significant in these experiments. Despite the impacts from other ambient predators and other abiotic factors, white shrimp were clearly capable of driving subtidal macrobenthos from their annual maximum density in winter/spring to their summertime minimum density.

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