Brazilian sandy beach macrofauna production: a review

Authors

  • Marcelo Petracco Universidade de São Paulo; Instituto Oceanográfico
  • Ricardo Silva Cardoso Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro; Instituto de Biociências; Departamento de Ecologia e Recursos Marinhos
  • Thais Navajas Corbisier Universidade de São Paulo; Instituto Oceanográfico
  • Alexander Turra Universidade de São Paulo; Instituto Oceanográfico

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1679-87592012000400006

Keywords:

Sandy beaches, Macrofauna, Secondary production, P/B ratio, Brazil

Abstract

The state of the art of the studies on the production of Brazilian sandy beach macrofauna was analyzed on the basis of the data available in the literature. For this purpose, the representativeness of the production dataset was examined by latitudinal distribution, degree of exposure and morphodynamic state of beaches, taxonomic groups, and methods employed. A descriptive analysis was, further, made to investigate the trends in production of the more representative taxonomic groups and species of sandy beach macrofauna. A total of 69 macrofauna annual production estimates were obtained for 38 populations from 25 studies carried out between 22º56'S and 32º20'S. Production estimates were restricted to populations on beaches located on the southern and southeastern Brazilian coast. Most of the populations in the dataset inhabit exposed dissipative sandy beaches and are mainly represented by mollusks and crustaceans, with a smaller number of polychaetes. The trends in production among taxonomic groups follow a similar pattern to that observed on beaches throughout the world, with high values for bivalves and decapods. The high turnover rate (P/B ratio) of the latter was due to the presence of several populations of the mole crab Emerita brasiliensis, which can attain high values of productivity, in the dataset. Most of the studies focus on the comparison of production and, especially, of P/B ratio according to life history traits in populations of the same species/taxonomic group. Despite the importance of life history-production studies, other approaches, such as the effect of man-induce disturbances on the macrofauna, should be undertaken in these threatened environments.

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Published

2012-12-01

Issue

Section

naodefinida

How to Cite

Brazilian sandy beach macrofauna production: a review . (2012). Brazilian Journal of Oceanography, 60(4), 473-484. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1679-87592012000400006