2012
DOI: 10.3354/meps09505
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Effects of coexistence between the blue mussel and eelgrass on sediment biogeochemistry and plant performance

Abstract: The habitat-modifying suspension-feeding mussel Mytilus edulis may have facilitating or inhibiting effects on seagrass meadows depending on the environmental conditions. We investigated the effects of M. edulis on sediment biogeochemistry in Zostera marina meadows under eutrophic conditions in Flensborg fjord, Denmark. Sediment and plant samples were collected at 5 stations with Z. marina (Eelgrass), 5 with Z. marina and M. edulis (Mixed), and at 2 unvegetated ones, 1 with mussels (Mussel) and 1 with sand (San… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…In the Baltic Sea, studies of the effects of M. edulis on Z. marina have had particularly conflicting results (e.g., Reusch et al, 1994;Worm and Reusch, 2000;Vinther et al, 2012). This study was conducted with seawater, sediments, and organisms collected from the Danish Straits, which connect the North Sea and Baltic Sea.…”
Section: Study Systemmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…In the Baltic Sea, studies of the effects of M. edulis on Z. marina have had particularly conflicting results (e.g., Reusch et al, 1994;Worm and Reusch, 2000;Vinther et al, 2012). This study was conducted with seawater, sediments, and organisms collected from the Danish Straits, which connect the North Sea and Baltic Sea.…”
Section: Study Systemmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…To half of the mesocosms, 28 mussels (=891 mussels m −2 or 27.6 ± 3.6 g dry soft tissue per mesocosm) were carefully added in their natural orientation, creating an unhummocked epibenthic layer of approximately 100% mussel cover. This mussel density corresponds to densities commonly found in mixed eelgrass-mussel patches in the Baltic Sea (Reusch et al, 1994;Reusch and Chapman, 1995;Vinther et al, 2012). Mussels that died during the experiment (b5%) were replaced.…”
Section: Field Collectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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