Abstract

Abstract. The height of seagrass canopy was manipulated in experimental plots in meadows of the fine‐leaves seagrass Cymodocea nodosa at two sites in the Mediterranean Sea, la Lagune du Brusc, Iles des Embiez near Toulon, and I'Etang de Diana on Corsica. Epifauna (small motile invertebrates associated with the seagrass canopy or sediment surface), was collected at night at both sites, and during the day at Diana only, from three treatments: full seagrass canopy, reduced canopy, and canopy removed entirely. Although epifaunal assemblages from the two sites were different, treatment modification had the same effect at both sites when analysed using multivariate ordinations. Abundance and biomass of total epifauna and of key taxa were all reduced in line with decreasing seagrass cover at both sites at night. The effects of treatment modification on epifauna during the day showed the same trend but were of greater magnitude, both for assemblages and for total abundance and biomass. At both sites and at both times, the fauna of plots from which seagrass had been cut tended to be dominated by animals of higher biomass than the fauna of plots with full canopy. Epifauna form the major dietary component of small fish inhabiting shallow, sheltered embayments. These results are therefore consistent with a model in which reduced abundance of fish associated with reduced seagrass canopy is explained by a reduction in food availability.

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