Abstract

This study examined whether buried organic matter in the form of seagrass influenced colonization by the corophiid amphipod Paracorophium excavatum in an intertidal sandflat. Laboratory manipulations were compared to results from field studies to determine the role of hydrodynamics in mediating the effects of the organic matter. At levels of organic loading greater than 1% of sediment dry weight, size frequency effects and decreases in numbers of colonizers occurred in still water conditions. In the field, however, at levels of organics up to ∼2% of sediment dry weight, only size-frequency effects were observed. A change in hydrodynamic conditions and the influence of this on sediment geochemistry is suggested as the most reasonable explanation for the disparity in colonization both between sites in the field and between laboratory and field manipulations. Two effects of organics upon corophiid amphipod colonization are proposed: a lower level of organic loading that can lead to a greater proportion of juveniles in the colonizing population and a higher level of organics that can lead to a decrease in the numbers of amphipods colonizing. The threshold at which these effects take place is modulated by the hydrodynamics of the environment. The same organic addition can therefore have different effects upon colonization across a tidal flat, which is dependent upon the variation in hydrodynamics

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