New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts
Variability in low tide populations of tuatua, Paphies donacina, in
Pegasus Bay, Canterbury, New Zealand
I. D. MARSDEN
Zoology Department
University of Canterbury
Private Bag 4800
Christchurch, New Zealand
email: i.marsden@zool.canterbury.ac.nz
Abstract Paphies donacina (Spengler, 1793) populations
were surveyed at 11 low tide sites on surf beaches along Pegasus Bay,
Canterbury, New Zealand, during summer 1998. Random sampling was not feasible.
At the non-random sites chosen the average number of tuatua per 5 m of
shoreline ranged between 0.1 and 62. Total wet weight biomass m
-2
was highest at the southern sites in the Bay. There were site-related
differences in length frequency distributions of tuatua populations. Northern
populations included a wide length range and southern populations were
dominated by larger bivalves. Average shell length increased significantly with
distance south, being close to 40 mm at Waikuku and 80 mm at Taylors
Mistake. The shell length : width and weight relationships were similar for
tuatua collected over the whole geographic range. Average dry weight condition
index varied significantly between sites (ANOVA
F = 23.3, d.f. = 10,
329) depending on the length distribution of the contributing population. Where
populations included a wide length range the condition index was positively
correlated with shell length but in populations dominated by larger bivalves
there was either no relationship or a negative relationship with shell length.
Juvenile tuatua were found at average densities between 81 and
1200 m
-2 at all sites except Taylors Mistake. The mean length
of recruits ranged from 2.2 to 3.1 mm and shell length was independent of
both juvenile and adult density. These results are discussed in relation to the
environmental and other factors thought to influence population structure and
recruitment of tuatua in Pegasus Bay.
Keywords Paphies donacina; tuatua; population
structure; condition index; Pegasus Bay, Canterbury
M98031
Received 19 June 1998; accepted 7 October 1999
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1195K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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