Abstract

Abstract.A seagrass bed in Otsuchi Bay, northeastern Japan, consists of three seagrass species (Zostera marina, Z. caulescensandZ. caespitosa) that differ in morphology and phenology. We studied the mobile epifaunal community in the seagrass bed to examine (1) whether seasonal and between‐substrate variation in the epifaunal community agrees with variation in seagrass abundance and morphological complexity, and (2) whether patterns of seasonal and between‐substrate variation vary among epifaunal species. We collected mobile epifauna from each ofZ. marinaandZ. caulescenson 11 occasions between October 1995 and November 1996 (at 1 – 1.5 month intervals) using a hand‐closing net. A total of 9 842 individuals of mobile epiphytic animals were collected and they were classified into 80 taxa. Abundance and species richness of the epifaunal community were high in summer to autumn and low in winter to spring, and diversity index and evenness were higher inZ. marinathanZ. caulescens. However, patterns of seasonal and between‐substrate variation in these parameters did not parallel those in seagrass abundance and complexity. Most of the dominant epifaunal species showed significant seasonal and between‐substrate variation in abundance, although their patterns varied greatly among individual species. A cluster analysis recognized several distinct groups of animals showing similar seasonal and between‐substrate variation. Our findings suggest that the observed variation in the epifaunal community is not determined by a single or some strong external factors but by complex interactions of multiple factors operating differently for each component species.

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