4.2 Article

Invertebrate community associated with the macroalga Halimeda kanaloana meadow in Maui, Hawaii

Journal

INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF HYDROBIOLOGY
Volume 93, Issue 3, Pages 328-341

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/iroh.200711063

Keywords

benthic ecology; Polychaete; submerged aquatic vegetation; Hawaiian; multivariate analysis

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An expansive meadow of the native macroalga Halimeda kanaloana has been found in west Maui, Hawaii. This study examined the invertebrate community associated with the H. kanaloana meadow. Analyses of samples collected by SCUBA divers found that the meadow supports a diverse and unique benthic community. The meadow provides a suitable habitat for a variety of epibenthic and epifaunal invertebrates in the otherwise homogeneous sandy habitat. Infaunal polychaete abundances, species richness and Shannon-Wiener diversity index were also higher inside the meadow. Abundances of epibenthic organisms, and dissimilarities of the polychaete assemblage, inside and outside the meadow were greater at deeper stations. This might be due to an effect of the Halimeda density rather than depth, suggesting that the macroalgal density might play an important role in shaping the benthic community.

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