Habitat creation and biodiversity maintenance in mangrove forests: Teredinid bivalves as ecosystem engineers

School of Biological Science, The University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, Hants, United Kingdom
DOI
10.7287/peerj.preprints.462v2
Subject Areas
Animal Behavior, Biodiversity, Ecology, Ecosystem Science, Environmental Sciences
Keywords
mangrove wood, teredinid tunnels, refuge, biodiversity, niche creation, cryptic fauna, nursery.
Copyright
© 2014 Hendy et al.
Licence
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ PrePrints) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
Cite this article
Hendy IW, Michie LA, Taylor BW. 2014. Habitat creation and biodiversity maintenance in mangrove forests: Teredinid bivalves as ecosystem engineers. PeerJ PrePrints 2:e462v2

Abstract

Substantial amounts of dead wood in the intertidal zone of mature mangrove forests are tunnelled by teredinid bivalves. When the tunnels are exposed, animals are able to use tunnels as refuges. In this study, the effect of teredinid tunnelling upon mangrove forest faunal diversity was investigated. Mangrove wood not containing teredinid tunnels had very few species and abundance of animals. However, with a greater cross-sectional surface area of teredinid tunnels, the numbers of species and abundance of animals was significantly higher. Temperatures within teredinid-attacked wood were significantly cooler compared with air temperatures, and the animals in tunnels inside the wood may avoid desiccation by escaping the higher temperatures. Animals co-existing in teredinid tunnelled wood ranged from animals found in terrestrial ecosystems including centipedes, crickets and spiders, and animals found in subtidal marine ecosystems such as fish, octopods and polychaetes. There was also evidence of breeding within teredinid-attacked wood, as many juvenile individuals were found, and they may also benefit from the cooler wood temperatures. Teredinid tunnelled wood is a key low-tide refuge for cryptic animals, which would otherwise be exposed to piscivorous fishes and birds, and higher external temperatures. This study provides evidence that teredinids are ecosystem engineers and also provides an example of a mechanism whereby mangrove forests support intertidal biodiversity and nurseries through the wood-boring activity of teredinids.

Author Comment

This will be a submission to PeerJ for review. Draft manuscript, 'V2' differs from the first submission, as the sentence at lines, 344 - 345 was not complete. The sentence has now been amended.