Open Journal of Ecology

Volume 4, Issue 15 (November 2014)

ISSN Print: 2162-1985   ISSN Online: 2162-1993

Google-based Impact Factor: 1.33  Citations  h5-index & Ranking

Diversity, Distribution and Composition of the Bivalvia Class on the Rocky Intertidal Zone of Marine Priority Region 32, Mexico

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 4456KB)  PP. 961-973  
DOI: 10.4236/oje.2014.415080    4,988 Downloads   6,532 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

The Bivalvia Class, is widely represented in marine ecosystems and is economically important; this research focused on this class and was carried out by sampling the rocky intertidal zone of seven sites located in the Marina Region Priority No. 32, Guerrero, Mexico, where the National Commission for the Knowledge and Use of Biodiversity reported lack of knowledge on marine species living there. The objectives were to examine species richness associated with the rocky intertidal zone, determine how the community is composed by the representation of families based on species richness and abundance, know the distribution of the species, analyze the structure sizes of populations and estimate the diversity index. Sampling was conducted at seven sites; the sampling unit was one square meter and the sampling area was 10 m2. 32 species were identified. Four species are new records for the Mexican Pacific Transitional: one for the state of Guerrero and one for Marine Priority Region 32. Arcidae and Mytilidae Families were better represented in species richness and Chamidae Family was the best represented in abundance. Chama coralloides was considered to be the representative species of the area; Striostrea prismatica showed the greatest size. The diversity index was estimated (H' = 3.65 bits/individuals). Species richness is high and corresponds to that expected in a tropical area.

Share and Cite:

Flores-Garza, R. , López-Rojas, V. , Flores-Rodríguez, P. and Ramírez, C. (2014) Diversity, Distribution and Composition of the Bivalvia Class on the Rocky Intertidal Zone of Marine Priority Region 32, Mexico. Open Journal of Ecology, 4, 961-973. doi: 10.4236/oje.2014.415080.

Cited by

[1] The Perceptions of Local Community's About Diversity of Mangrove Ecological Potential for Ecotourism Development in the South Coast of Lombok Island, Indonesia
2021
[2] Species diversity of marine bivalves from the Strait of Rupat Island Riau Province, Indonesia
IOP Conference Series …, 2021
[3] Tropical and Subtropical Ostreidae of the American Pacific: Taxonomy, Biology, Ecology, and Genetics
2020
[4] New records of bivalves in the Mexican Pacific Transitional Zone
2020
[5] Dredging-induced shell damages to hard clam (Meretrix meretrix): a Malaysian case study
2019
[6] Structure of molluscan communities in shallow subtidal rocky bottoms of Acapulco, Mexico
2019
[7] MARTENS 1897 AT LASOLO ESTUARY OF SOUTHEAST SULAWESI
Jurnal Ilmu dan Teknologi Kelautan Tropis, 2018
[8] DINAMIKA POPULASI KERANG POKEA Batissa violacea var. celebensis VON MARTENS 1897 DI MUARA SUNGAI LASOLO SULAWESI TENGGARA
2018
[9] Analisis Hambur Balik Akustik untuk Klasifikasi dan Pemetaan Substrat Dasar Perairan di Teluk Yos Sudarso, Kota Jayapura
2018
[10] Occurrence and Distribution of Marsh Clam, Polymesoda spp. in Marudu Bay, Sabah, Malaysia
2018
[11] La clase Bivalvia en sitios rocosos de las Regiones Marinas Prioritarias en Guerrero, México: riqueza de especies, abundancia y distribución
2017
[12] Species diversity and distribution of marine bivalves from coastal transitional ecosystem of Uran, Navi Mumbai, India
Advances in Environmental Biology, 2017
[13] Spat Production of the Rock Oyster Striostrea prismatica (Gray, 1825)
Journal of shellfish research, 2017

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.