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The importance of adult movement and aggregation for Mytilus spp. population dynamics in the St. Lawrence Estuary

Posted on:2008-06-08Degree:M.ScType:Thesis
University:McGill University (Canada)Candidate:Petrovic, FilipFull Text:PDF
GTID:2443390005459594Subject:Ecology
Abstract/Summary:
Mussel colonization is assumed to result from factors affecting recruitment and post-recruitment survival. Despite evidence of passive migration and habitat engineering by adult mussels, the contribution to population dynamics of these processes remains unknown. This research attempts to elucidate the relative importance and scale of (1) adult movement vs. recruitment and (2) of local habitat engineering vs. habitat heterogeneity, for colonization by the blue mussel, Mytilus spp., in the St. Lawrence Estuary, Quebec. Transplants of marked mussels were used to test these ideas. Our results support the hypothesis that colonization mostly occurs through disturbance-mediated adult movement. The scale of this displacement was quantified. Colonization was accelerated by topographic heterogeneity and engineered habitat propagation. These results counter the notion that mussel population dynamics are solely regulated by recruitment and growth, and suggest that distribution patterns are also upheld by adult aggregation and movement from the local scale to landscape level.
Keywords/Search Tags:Adult, Movement, Population dynamics, Colonization, Habitat
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