Abstract
The diversity of the macrobenthos was measured, using the rarefaction method of Sanders (1968), from bottom samples from Loch Etive, Loch Creran and the Firth of Lorne (Scottish west coast). Each sample (representing 1.6 m2 of bottom area) was accumulated as a series of separate hauls taken consecutively in a systematic pattern with a van Veen grab. Two habitats were considered: soft mud and muddy sand. Within-habitat comparison of species diversity clearly indicates that diversity is lower in Loch Etive than in Loch Creran or the Firth of Lorne. The reasons for this are probably connected with the relatively high freshwater runoff into Loch Etive, possibly limiting the survival of planktonic larval stages of the benthos. The values of species diversity measured for the soft-mud areas in Loch Creran and the Firth of Lorne are thought to be representative for this habitat along the west coast of the British Isles. They agree well with the diversity predicted by Sanders for such a boreal inshore area, where a maritime climate prevails, on the basis of his time-stability hypothesis and the results of his sampling elsewhere.
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Communicated by J.H.S. Blaxter, Oban
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Gage, J. Community structure of the benthos in Scottish sea-lochs. I. Introduction and species diversity. Marine Biology 14, 281–297 (1972). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00348178
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00348178