To evaluate the effects of a deposit-feeding bivalve on meiobenthic assemblage structure in muddy habitats, a laboratory experiment was performed at the AskΓΆ Laboratory in the northwestern Baltic proper. Microcosms, surface area 104 cm, containing a c. 7-cm thick layer of sieved (0.5 mm) sublittoral
Selectivity in feeding by the deposit-feeding bivalveMacoma nasuta
β Scribed by J. Hylleberg; V. F. Gallucci
- Book ID
- 104750789
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1975
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 976 KB
- Volume
- 32
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0025-3162
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β¦ Synopsis
Macoma nasuta Conrad is primarily a deposit-feeding bivalve sucking the top millimeter of the sediment surface. Growth experiments show that surface sediment supports growth better than detritus falling from the water column. Gut clearance time is between I and 9 h (12oc). Fecal pellets are ejected in a regular rhythm. However, the total amount of feces per unit time shows considerable individual variation. Due to sorting in the mantle cavity, about 97% (dry weight) of the surface material is ejected again as pseudofeces. Selectivity by the bivalve is estimated by comparison of particle size and organic composition of sandy and muddy sediments and compared with feces produced by clams fed these sediments. Fecal pellets are in all cases richer in organic components than the sediment, indicating a high degree of selectivity. Ingestion and digestion of small animals (meiofauna) occur, but many of the ingested specimens survive. It is not possible to estimate the assimilation of organic matter by simple difference between the ingested sediment and the ejected feces. The difficulties in calculating energy budgets which arise from selective feeding and associated bacteria are discussed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
An exposure chamber, the "clambox", was developed to measure ventilation rate, sediment processing rate, and efficiency of pollutant uptake by Macorna nasuta Conrad, a surface deposit-feeding clam. Clams, collected from Yaquina Bay, Oregon, USA, were cemented into a hole in a piece of rubber dental