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Marine Macroinvertebrate Diversity of St. Catherines Island, Georgia
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Prezant, Robert (Author)
- TOLL, RONALD (Author)
- Rollins, Harold (Author)
- CHAPMAN, ERIC (Author)
Title
Marine Macroinvertebrate Diversity of St. Catherines Island, Georgia
Abstract
St. Catherines Island is one of several barrier islands lining the coast of Georgia, USA. This island is among the least recently anthropogenically impacted of the Georgia Sea Islands, but had not previously been examined in detail for coastal invertebrate macrofauna. From 1992 through late 1998 a coastal survey was conducted that examined the diverse marine invertebrate fauna of St. Catherines Island. Salt marshes, sand flats, mid- to low-energy sand beaches, beach wood debris, tidal creeks, shallow benthos, and artificial hard substrata (including docks) were qualitatively sampled for macroinvertebrates. Over 340 species were identified. Crustaceans composed close to 40% (14% amphipods; 15% decapods), polychaetes 17.5%, and molluscs about 25% of all species recovered. These results are compared to the few other relevant studies from the United States mid-Atlantic Coast.
Publication
American Museum Novitates
Date
2002
Volume
3367
Pages
1-31
Journal Abbr
American Museum Novitates
Citation Key
prezantMarineMacroinvertebrateDiversity2002
Library Catalog
ResearchGate
Extra
5 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation
Prezant, R., TOLL, R., Rollins, H., & CHAPMAN, E. (2002). Marine Macroinvertebrate Diversity of St. Catherines Island, Georgia. American Museum Novitates, 3367, 1–31. https://doi.org/10.1206/0003-0082(2002)367%3C0001:MMDOSC%3E2.0.CO;2
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