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A quantitative assessment of the response of mobile estuarine fauna to crab-tiles during tidal immersion using remote underwater video cameras

Authors :
Richard C. Thompson
Martin J. Attrill
Ross A. Coleman
Emma V. Sheehan
Source :
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 387:68-74
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2010.

Abstract

Laying artificial materials on the shore to create refugia that attract crustaceans is a ‘fishing’ technique known mainly from South America and the UK. In the UK, this method of fishing is known as ‘crab-tiling’, which involves laying of roof tiles, pieces of guttering or car tyres (‘crab-tiles’) intertidally in estuaries to provide habitat for Carcinus maenas. Crabs are then harvested for use as angling bait. C. maenas are known to reside under crab-tiles during low tide, however the extent to which crab-tiles influence the distribution and behaviour of crabs and other estuarine fauna during high tide is not clear. To investigate this, fixed underwater video cameras were deployed on a mudflat over two separate occasions in control (non-tiled) and tiled sites. Crabs were significantly more abundant in crab-tiled sites than control sites, and they remained relatively stationary, travelling less in tiled sites than those in control sites. The abundance of mobile fauna (e.g. benthic gobies, mysids, crabs and pelagic fishes) was greater in control sites than in tiled sites during July. The same trend was observed in March but was not significant. Diversity (number of taxa) tended to be greater in control sites than tiled sites on both occasions, but the trend was not significant. The faunal assemblage was not different between control and tiled treatments in either March or July. Crabs occupied crab-tiles throughout high tide immersion, and qualitative observations indicated a tendency to aggressively defend particular tiles. It also seems likely that the tiles provided some protection for the crabs from fish and diving birds.

Details

ISSN :
00220981
Volume :
387
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d855cb89282be172a948cd4c16f70639
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jembe.2010.02.008