Abstract

1. A quantitative sampling survey of the benthic macrofauna inhabiting the intertidal sand and mud flats of Barnstable Harbor, Massachusetts, was conducted to describe general community structure and examine temporal changes in species composition.2. Classification analysis delimited coarse and fine sand, mud, muddy-sand, and gravel-mud benthic species associations. The 32 species used in the inverse classification analysis were partitioned into 10 species groups, reflecting spatial distributional patterns. Many of the species were both dominant and ubiquitous, masking discrete species groupings.3. The majority of macrobenthos at Barnstable Harbor were deposit-feeders which comprised more than 90% of all organisms sampled. The deposit-feeders normally dominate mud and muddy-sand sediments. Suspension-feeders were most abundant in fine sands. The relationship of sedimentary parameters affecting the distribution of both trophic groups proposed by Sanders is generally supported.4. While no significant changes were evident in species diversity, evenness, or species number throughout a 19 month sampling period, classification analysis delimited seasonal clustering of both samples and species groupings. These patterns were repeatable over a two year period suggesting that dynamic "equilibrium," not successional change was occurring.5. Seasonal clustering patterns of some species were related to the appearance of different zoogeographic faunal province elements. Typical warm-temperature Virginian components and cold-temperate Nova Scotian species were commonly found in late summer and winter, respectively.

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