Authors
Serena Donadi, Tjisse van der Heide, Els M van der Zee, Johan S Eklöf, Johan van de Koppel, Ellen J Weerman, Theunis Piersma, Han Olff, Britas Klemens Eriksson
Publication date
2013/2
Journal
Ecology
Volume
94
Issue
2
Pages
489-498
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Description
Increasing evidence shows that spatial interactions between sedentary organisms can structure communities and promote landscape complexity in many ecosystems. Here we tested the hypothesis that reef‐forming mussels (Mytilus edulis L.), a dominant intertidal ecosystem engineer in the Wadden Sea, promote abundances of the burrowing bivalve Cerastoderma edule L. (cockle) in neighboring habitats at relatively long distances coastward from mussel beds. Field surveys within and around three mussel beds showed a peak in cockle densities at 50–100 m toward the coast from the mussel bed, while cockle abundances elsewhere in the study area were very low. Field transplantation of cockles showed higher survival of young cockles (2–3 years old) and increased spat fall coastward of the mussel bed compared to within the bed and to areas without mussels, whereas growth decreased within and coastward …
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