Variations in Sampling Procedure and Frequency Affect Estimates of Recruitment of Barnacles
Date
1993-09
Authors
MINCHINTON, TE
Scheibling, Robert Eric
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Abstract
The influence of variations in sampling procedure and frequency on estimates of recruitment of
the barnacle Semibalanus balanoides (L.) on an intertidal rocky shore at Sandy Cove, Nova Scotia,
Canada was determined from approximately daily monitoring of recently settled individuals. The
effect of sampling procedure (removing or not removing barnacles after sampling) on estimates of
recruitment varied with intertidal height. There was no effect of sampling procedure in the
mid-intertidal zone, but in the low zone, where recruitment was on average 4 times- larger, the
estimate of recruitment was significantly greater from quadrats where barnacles had been removed
after sampling. Estimates of recruitment and post-settlement mortality decreased exponentially as
the sampling frequency decreased. In both the mid- and low-intertidal zones, significantly larger
estimates of recruitment and post-settlement mortality were obtained when sampling every 1.3 d
compared to sampling ca every 2 d. These findings indicate that comparisons of results between
studies will be difficult if estimates of recruitment or post-settlement mortality are confounded by
variations in sampling frequency. Unless individuals can be tracked over time, estimates of
recruitment made by sampling without removal of recruits will tend to underestimate settlement by
incorporating some post-settlement mortality, the magnitude of which will be directly related to the
interval between samples. Without quantitative data on the effect of sampling frequency on estimates
of recruitment and post-settlement mortality, results of tests of hypotheses requiring accurate
estimates of recruitment or post-settlement mortality may be compromised if sampling is not done as
frequently as possible.
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Citation
MINCHINTON, TE, and RE SCHEIBLING. 1993. "Variations in Sampling Procedure and Frequency Affect Estimates of Recruitment of Barnacles." Marine Ecology Progress Series 99(1-2): 83-88. doi:10.3354/meps099083