Composición y estructura de la comunidad de moluscos de fondos blandos de la isla Santa Cruz, golfo de California, México

Translated title of the contribution: Composition and community structure of soft bottom mollusks on santa cruz island, Gulf of California, Mexico

Arturo Tripp-Quezada, Arturo Tripp-Valdez, Miguel A. Tripp-Valdez, Norberto Capetillo Piñar, Marcial Villalejo-Fuerte

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: In the marine environment of San Cruz Island, no published references exist regarding the ecology of softbottom mollusks. Thus, it is important to carry out research that broadens and deepens the knowledge of this marine area and contributes to proposals of management methods and alternatives for the sustainable use of insular marine resources. Goals. This study seeks to characterize the community composition and structure of soft-bottom mollusks of the infralitoral zone of Santa Cruz Island, and describe some of the characteristics associated with their habitat. Methods: During August 2010, 32 samples were collected: 16 were biological samples and 16 were sediment samples. The composition, abundance, and diversity of the malacological community were analyzed using ecological indexes. Results: 695 individuals were recorded and grouped in two classes: Gastropoda with 446 organisms (5 orders, 11 families, and 19 species); the most abundant species was Siphonaria maura (18%); the class Bivalvia included 249 organisms (8 orders, 14 families, and 25 species); the most abundant species was Tellina eburnea (10%). The Gastropoda class were more abundant than the Bivalvia, i.e., 64.17% and 35% respectively. The species with major abundances and relative frequencies were the gastropods Siphonaria maura (18%) and the bivalve Septifer seteki (69%). Four trophic categories were identifed: flterers (73%), herbivores (20%), carnivores (5%), and ectoparasites, the latter of which were the rarest group (2 %). Conclusions: At this site, the specific richness (44 taxa) was lower compared to other sites from different latitudes of the western Gulf of California, likely derived from the higher energy environment of the study area that allowed only juvenile mollusks and micromollusks to be collected.

Translated title of the contributionComposition and community structure of soft bottom mollusks on santa cruz island, Gulf of California, Mexico
Original languageSpanish
Pages (from-to)51-59
Number of pages9
JournalHidrobiologica
Volume28
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018
Externally publishedYes

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