Natural Physical Disturbances and Communities of Marine Soft Bottoms
- 1 January 1981
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Inter-Research Science Center in Marine Ecology Progress Series
- Vol. 6 (2) , 223-228
- https://doi.org/10.3354/meps006223
Abstract
Natural physical disturbances [invertebrate community disturbed by rays] are important in the organization of a variety of terrestrial and marine communities. Some workers have suggested that disturbance may play a similar role in soft-bottom infauna communities. A consequence of such a view is the expectation that some species will become unusually abundant early in the recolonization of a disturbed patch, reflecting their dependence on disturbed localities for their persistence in the local community. The literature on soft-bottom communities was reviewed. Some species become unusually abundant early in the recovery of a disturbed patch. The time course of the response of these species varies from hours to months, apparently reflecting differences in life-history strategies. It is not clear that these species are responding to a release of resources caused by the absence of their competitors as predicted. These species may be responding to a resource provided by the disturbance without reference to competitors. Although present models provide a useful conceptual framework, a rigorous theory of how disturbance functions in soft-bottom communities has not emerged.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- The response of meiofauna to sediment disturbanceJournal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 1980
- Response of Soft-Bottom Benthos to Annual Catastrophic Disturbance in a South Florida EstuaryMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1980
- Disturbance in Marine Intertidal Boulder Fields: The Nonequilibrium Maintenance of Species DiversityEcology, 1979
- Disaster, Catastrophe, and Local Persistence of the Sea Palm Postelsia palmaeformisScience, 1979
- Predicting particle selection by deposit feeders: A model and its implications 1Limnology and Oceanography, 1978
- Diversity in Tropical Rain Forests and Coral ReefsScience, 1978
- The Establishment and Development of a Marine Epifaunal CommunityEcological Monographs, 1977
- Repopulation of the polychaete fauna of an intertidal habitat following natural defaunation: Species equilibriumOecologia, 1976
- Habitat expansion among polychaetous annelids repopulating a defaunated marine habitatMarine Biology, 1976