Astartids are a major component in marine ecosystems, playing important roles in trophic networks. At the southern Southwest Atlantic, Astarte longirostra lives partially buried in the sediment. Muricid and naticid gastropods feed on clams, drilling a hole on their valves. Drillholes made by predatory gastropods are useful tools for evolutionary and ecological studies, since they provide direct, preservable evidences of predation. The aim of this study was to analyse the community structure of and predation pressure on A. longirostra from the continental shelf off Tierra del Fuego (Southwest Atlantic), covering an area of 120 km2. Bottom samples were collected with a 13.94 dm2 Van Veen grab during July 2014. Complete valves were separated from the sediment under a stereomicroscope. The valve length and drillhole diameter were measured with a micrometer eyepiece. Astarte longirostra valves occurred from 42 to 92 m. Predation pressure was assessed in 12 samples with at least 20 valves each, which were collected from 74 to 92 m, as clams were less frequent at shallower depths. The densities of this clam were variable (14–409 ind.m-2). Of the 4,292 disarticulated valves analysed, 959 had drillhole marks. Due to their irregular shape, 11.6% of the drillholes could not be attributed to predatory gastropods. The remaining 88.4% had rounded drillholes attributable to muricids and naticids, which exert strong predation pressure on clams. The predation rate was high (34.2% to 68.2%; pooled rate=44.4%). Predation did not differ between left and right valves (Fisher´s Test, p=0.67). The correlation between drillhole diameter and valve length was positive and highly significant, meaning that larger predators prefer larger clams. The size of the valves ranged from 0.62 to 5.85 mm. The size--frequency distribution was bimodal, with modes in 2–2.49 mm and 3.5–3.99 mm, suggesting the existence of two cohorts. Drillholes were significantly more frequent in the central sector of the valves. Of the seven species of predatory gastropods found, the naticid Falsilunatia patagonica was the most frequent.
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Community structure and predation marks on Astarte longirostra d’Orbigny (Bivalvia) from the Southwest Atlantic off Tierra del Fuego
Published:
14 October 2024
by MDPI
in The 3rd International Electronic Conference on Diversity
session Marine Diversity
Abstract:
Keywords: Astartids; clams; community structure; predation pressure; predatory gastropods
Comments on this paper
Laura Schejter
15 October 2024
Your work is very interesting. What are the other species of predatory mollusks that you were able to detect through the marks? And in what percentages did you find them? I have an idea that some studies on predation marks on other bivalves have been conducted in the Tierra del Fuego region as well. Did you find any similarities with this species? Thank you
Maria Liuzzi
15 October 2024
Hola Laura, muchas gracias por tus comentarios. Te contesto en castellano ya que las dos somos argnetinas y es nuestra lengua nativa. Efectivamente, esta especie de naticido es la única que apareció en todas las muestras. Las restantes 7 especies, entre naticidos y miricidos fueron menos frecuentes. Estamos terminando de redactar un paper con todos estos datos. Con gusto te lo envío cuando esté finalizado. Hallamos que el comportamiento predominante de los gasteropodos depredadores sobre este bivalvo es estereotipado, como ocurre en la mayoría de los casos cuando están involucrados los naticidos (aunque hay excepciones en la bibliografia)
Laura Schejter
15 October 2024
gracias ;) Claro, cuando tengas el artículo te pido una copia!