Skip to main content
Log in

Polychaete feeding guilds from Georges Bank, USA

  • Published:
Marine Biology Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Based on 408 quantitative samples distributed over two seasons (winter and spring) and 42 stations, from Georges Bank, New England, USA, the feeding guild classification presented by Fauchald and Jumars was examined. Hypotheses involving the association of particular feeding guilds with environmental variables were posed and tested. In this study, herbivore, motile, jawed (HMJ); filtering and surface deposit feeding, sessile or discretely motile, and tentaculate (F-SD-SDT); burrowing, sessile, non-jawed (BSX); surface deposit feeding, motile, non-jawed (SMX); carnivore, motile, jawed (CMJ), and filter feeding, discretely motile, non-jawed (FDT) were the major feeding guilds of polychaetes. There were more significant associations between feeding guilds and depth, dissolved oxygen, and mean phi and gravel than any other environmental variables. Some significant relationships between feeding guilds and depth, fine-grained sediment, nutrition in sediment (carbon, nitrogen, bacterial biomass, and microbial biomass) emerged. Burrowing, motile, non-jawed (BMX), surface deposit feeding, discretely motile, tentaculate (SDT) and FDT increased with depth. BMX, BSX, and FDT increased with carbon, microbial biomass, and nitrogen, respectively. Some preliminary polychaete feeding surfaces were posed. Nantucket Shoals and Georges Bank were characterized by HMJ and F-SD-SDT; Northern Slope by FDT; Southern Slope by FDT and HMJ; Southwestern Slope by HMJ, SMX, BMX; and the Gulf of Maine by F-SD-SDT, SDT and surface deposit feeding, sessile, tentaculate (SST).

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

Literature cited

  • Bader, R. G.: The role organic matter in determining the distribution of bivalves in sediments. J. mar. Res. 13, 32–47 (1954)

    Google Scholar 

  • Clifford, H. T. and W. Stephenson: An introduction of numerical classification. 222 pp. New York: Academic Press (1975)

    Google Scholar 

  • Conover, R. J.: Transformation of organic matter, In: Marine ecology, IV. Dynamics, pp 221–499. Ed. by O. Kinne. New York: Wiley-Interscience Publications 1978

    Google Scholar 

  • Fauchald, K. and P. A. Jumars: The diet of worms: a study of polychaete feeding guilds. Oceanogr. Mar. Biol. Ann. Rev. 17, 193–284. Ed. by M. Barnes. Aberdeen Univ. Press. 1979

  • Fournier, R. O., J. Marra, R. Bohrer, and M. van Det: Plankton dynamics and nutrient enrichment of the Scotian Shelf. J. Fish. Res. Bd Can. 34 (7) 1004–1018 (1977)

    Google Scholar 

  • Gray, J. G.: Animal-sediment relationships. Oceanogr. Mar. Biol. Ann. Rev. 12, 223–261. Ed. by M. Barnes. London: George Allen and Unwin Ltd. 1974

    Google Scholar 

  • Hargrave, B.: Benthic communities. In: Biological oceanographic processes, 2nd edition, pp 176–264 Ed. By T. R. Parsons, M. Takahaski and B. Hargrave. New York: Pergamon Press 1977

    Google Scholar 

  • Hylleberg, J.: Selective feeding by Abarenicola pacifica with notes on Abarenicola vagabunda and a concept of gardening in lug worms. Ophelia 14, 113–137 (1975)

    Google Scholar 

  • Johnson, R. G.: Particulate matter at the sediment water interface in coastal environments. J. mar. Res. 32, 313–330 (1974)

    Google Scholar 

  • Jørgensen, N. O. G.: Uptake of L-valine and other amino acids by the polychaete Nereis virens. Mar. Biol. 52, 45–52 (1979)

    Google Scholar 

  • Jumars, P. A. and K. Fauchald: Between community contrasts in successful polychaete feeding strategies. In: Ecology of marine benthos, pp 1–20. Ed. by B. C. Coull. Belle W. Baruch Library in Marine Science, No. 6, Univ. South Carolina Press 1977

  • Longbottom, B. R.: The distribution of Arenicola marina with special reference to the effects of particle size and organic matter of sediments. J. exp. mar. Biol. Ecol. 5, 138–157 (1970)

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Mangum, D. P.: Studies on speciation in maldanid polychaetes of the North American Atlantic Coast. II. Distribution and competitive interaction of five sympatric species. Limnol. Oceanogr. 9, 12–26 (1964)

    Google Scholar 

  • Maurer, D., L. Watling, W. Leathem and P. Kinner: Seasonal changes in feeding types of estuarine benthic invertebrates from Delaware Bay. J. exp. mar. Biol. Ecol. 36, 125–155 (1979)

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Maurer, D. and W. Leathem: Ecological distribution of polychaetous annelids of Georges Bank, 186 pp. Technical Report, College of Marine Studies, University of Delaware (1980a)

  • Maurer, D. and W. Leathem: Dominant species of polychaetous annelids of Georges Bank. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 3, 135–144 (1980b)

    Google Scholar 

  • Michael, A.: Benthic Infauna, 4th Quarterly Progress Report, pp 288–327. In: New England, OCS Environmental Benchmark, Fourth Quarterly Summary Report to the Bureau of Land Management, ERCO, Inc. Cambridge, Mass. (1977)

  • NEOEB, New England OCS Environmental Benchmark: Draft Final Report to Bureau of Land Management, vol. II and V ERCO, Inc. (1978)

  • Pandian, T. J.: Mechanisms of heterotrophy. In: Marine ecology, II. Physiological mechanisms, pp. 61–239. Ed. by K. O. Kinne. New York: Wiley-Interscience Publ. 1975

    Google Scholar 

  • Popenoe, P. and D. Folger. Executive Summary, 1. In: North Atlantic OCS Environmental Assessment, 3rd Quarterly Report April, 1977–June 30, 1977 submitted to Bureau of Land Management (1977)

  • Rhoads, D. C.: Organism-sediment relations on the muddy sea floor. Oceanogr. Mar. Biol. Ann. Rev. 12: 263–300. Ed. by M. Barnes, George Allen and Urwin Ltd., London 1974

    Google Scholar 

  • Sanders, H.: Benthic studies in Buzzards Bay. I. Animal-sediment relationships. Limnol. Oceanogr. 3, 245–258 (1958)

    Google Scholar 

  • Sanders, H. L., R. R. Hessler and G. R. Hampson: An introduction to the study of deep-sea benthic faunal assemblages along the Gay Head-bermuda transect. Deep Sea Res. 12 (6), 845–867 (1965)

    Google Scholar 

  • Sick, L. V.: Seasonal and geographic variation in the concentrations of trace metals in zooplankton and macrobenthic invertebrates from Georges Bank. Final Report submitted to ERCO, Inc., Univ. of Delaware, Lewes, 107 pp. (1978)

    Google Scholar 

  • Sokolova, M. N.: Trophic structure of deep-sea macrobenthos. Mar. Biol. 16, 1–12 (1972)

    Google Scholar 

  • Tenore, K. R.: Utilization of aged detritus derived from different sources by the polychaete Capitella capitata. Mar. Biol. 44, 51–55 (1977a)

    Google Scholar 

  • Tenore, K. R.: Growth of the polychaete, Capitella capitata, cultured in different levels of detritus derived from various sources. Limnol. Oceanogr. 22, 936–941 (1977b)

    Google Scholar 

  • Tenore, K. R., R. B. Hanson, B. E. Dornseif and D. N. Wiederhold: The effect of organic nitrogen supplement of the utilization of different sources of detritus. Limnol. Oceanogr. 24, 350–355 (1979)

    Google Scholar 

  • Tenore, K. R., R. B. Hanson: Availability of detritus of different types and ages to a polychaete macroconsumer, Capitella capitata. Limnol. Oceanogr. 25 (3): 553–558 (1980)

    Google Scholar 

  • Thorson, G.: Bottom communities (sublittoral or shallow shelf), pp. 461–534. In: Treatise on marine ecology and paleoecology (Ed. by S. W. Hedgpeth) Geol. Soc. Amer. Mem. 67(1): 1296 (1957)

  • Vermersch, J. A., B. Butman, R. C. Beardsley. Hydrography of the shelf/slope front and Georges Bank, P. 28. In: A summary of an informal workshop of the physical oceanography of the Gulf of Maine and adjacent seas (Co-Convenors, R. C. Beardsley, B. Butman, R. Wright) SHOI, 52pp Woods Hole, Mass 1977

    Google Scholar 

  • Weinberg, J. R.: Ecological determinants of spionid distributions within dense patches of deposit-feeding polychaete Axiothella rubrocincta. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 1: 301–314 (1979)

    Google Scholar 

  • West, B., M. DeBurgh and F. Jeal: Dissolved organics in the nutrition of benthic invertebrates. In: Biology of benthic organisms, pp 587–593. 11th European Symposium on marine Biology, October 1976. Ed. by B. F. Keegan, P. O. Ceidigh and P. J. S. Boaden. New York: Pergamon Press 1977

    Google Scholar 

  • Whitlatch, R. B.: Food resource partitioning in the deposit-feeding polychaete Pectinaria gouldii. Biol. Bull. mar. biol. Lab., Woods Hole 147 (1), 227–235 (1974)

    Google Scholar 

  • Wolff, W. J.: A benthic food budget of the Grevelingen Estuary, the Netherlands, and a consideration of the mechanisms causing high benthic secondary production in estuaries. In: Ecology of marine benthos, Vol. 6, pp 267–280. Ed. by B. C. Coull, Belle W. Baruch Library in Marine Science, Columbia, S. C., University of South Carolina Press 1977

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Additional information

Communicated by I. Morris, West Boothbay Harbor

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Maurer, D., Leathem, W. Polychaete feeding guilds from Georges Bank, USA. Mar. Biol. 62, 161–171 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00388179

Download citation

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00388179

Keywords

Navigation