Abstract
The species richness, species composition and abundance of species in samples of fish, crustaceans and cephalopod mollusks were examined from samples collected from 2 monospecific seagrass meadows, P. australis and Z. capricorni. An analytical strategy is presented whereby the fauna were examined holistically by their full distribution of relative species occurrences and abundances. Significant differences were demonstrated in both species composition and species abundance between the 2 seagrass meadows. Greatest differences in species composition occurred during times of low species richness, greatest differences in abundance during times of increased species richness. Within each year species were more often found, and in greater numbers, in summer than in winter, but annual variability was such that some species occurred so frequently and in as great an abundance in summers of 1 yr as in winters of others. The fauna of P. australis often contained the most species, and during a time of high salinity many species common to both meadows declined. At that time a number of species characteristic of high salinity seagrass habitats showed increased frequencies in P. ausralis. The differences in the fauna of the 2 seagrasses were likely controlled by external events leading to variable recruitment success. Only during favorable recruitment periods were the numbers of individuals different beween the 2 meadows, while differences in species composition were heightened during periods of unfavorable recruitment for the dominant species.

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