9780521861724htl 1..2

(Jacob Rumans) #1
‘Aschelminthes’ (Nematoda, Gastrotricha, Kinorhyncha) being considered the
most primitive forms (Boaden,1989). These all have reproductive adaptations
associated with small size: direct benthic development, dispersal as adults, short
generation times (<1 year), semelparity, and reaching an asymptotic body
size after which growth stops and reproduction commences. It is probable that
these early meiofauna had the full range of trophic specializations before the
major macrobenthic groups (Annelida, Arthropoda, Mollusca, Echinodermata)
appeared. They were, and are, motile forms seeking food particles in a highly
discriminate manner. Macrofaunal species have an alternative set of size related
life-history and feeding traits: planktonic larval development and dispersal,
long generation times (>1 year), iteroparity (usually), and continuing growth
between successive spawnings. They may be either sedentary or motile, and
feed less selectively on food particles. These contrasting traits are summarized
in Table11.2. Warwick (1984) suggested that the bimodal pattern of species-size
distribution is apparent because there is a particular size at which meiofaunal
life-history and feeding traits can be optimized, and another for macrofauna
traits, compromises either being non-viable or disadvantageous. As size departs
in eithes direction (larger or smaller) from these optima, fewer and fewer species

Proportion of species (%)0.25

1

4

16

Number of taxa

0

5

10

15

20

10 –9 10 –6 10 –3 100
Body size (g dry weight)

(a)


(b)


Figure 11.3(a) Species body-size
distribution for the benthos of Mirror
Lake, New Hampshire, USA (triangles
and dotted line) compared with a typical
shallow-water temperate marine
benthic distribution (dots and solid line)
(from Strayer, 1986 ). (b) Taxon body-size
distribution in Lone Oak stream, SE
England, drawn on the samex-axis scale
as (a) (after Steadet al., 2005). Note the
close similarity of the two unimodal
freshwater distributions and the
contrast with the marine bimodal
distribution.

BODY SIZE AND DIVERSITY IN MARINE SYSTEMS 215
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