Title of article :
Transport of horseshoe crab eggs by waves and swash on an estuarine beach: Implications for foraging shorebirds
Author/Authors :
Karl F. Nordstrom، نويسنده , , Nancy L. Jackson، نويسنده , , David R. Smith، نويسنده , , Richard G. Weber، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
The abundance of horseshoe crab eggs in the swash zone and remaining on the beach after tide levels fall was evaluated to identify how
numbers of eggs available to shorebirds differ with fluctuations in spawning numbers of horseshoe crabs, wave energies and beach elevation
changes. Field data were gathered 1e6 June 2004 at Slaughter Beach on the west side of Delaware Bay, USA. Counts of spawning crabs
and process data from a pressure transducer and an anemometer and wind vane were related to number of eggs, embryos and larvae taken
at depth and on the surface of the foreshore and in the active swash zone using a streamer trap. Beach elevation changes and depths of sediment
activation were used to determine the potential for buried eggs to be exhumed by waves and swash.
Mean significant wave heights during high water levels ranged from 0.08 to 0.40 m. Spawning counts were low (50e140 females km 1)
when wave heights were low; no spawning occurred when wave heights were high. Vegetative litter (wrack) on the beach provides local traps
for eggs, making more eggs available for shorebirds. Accumulation of litter on days when wave energy is low increases the probability that eggs
will remain on the surface. High wave energies transport more eggs in the swash, but these eggs are dispersed or buried, and fewer eggs remain
on the beach. Peaks in the number of eggs in the swash uprush occur during tidal rise and around time of high tide. The number of eggs in
transport decreases during falling tide. Many more eggs move in the active swash zone than are found on the beach after water level falls, increasing
the efficiency of bird foraging in the swash. Greater numbers of eggs in the swash during rising tide than falling tide and fewer eggs at
lower elevations on the beach, imply that foraging becomes less productive as the tide falls and may help account for the tendency of shorebirds
to feed on rising tides rather than on falling or low tides on days when no spawning occurs.
Keywords :
Wrack , Delaware Bay , Shorebirds , estuarine beach , horseshoe crab eggs , wave runup
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science