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Properties of sea grass and sand flat sediments from the intertidal zone of St. Andrew Bay, Florida
Grady, J.R. (1981). Properties of sea grass and sand flat sediments from the intertidal zone of St. Andrew Bay, Florida. Estuaries 4(4): 335-344
In: Estuaries. The Estuarine Research Federation, Chesapeake Biological Laboratory: Columbia, S.C., etc.,. ISSN 0160-8347; e-ISSN 1559-2758, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Chemical elements > Nonmetals > Carbon
    Composition > Sediment composition
    Dimensions > Size > Particle size
    Distribution > Ecological distribution
    Environments > Aquatic environment > Marine environment > Intertidal environment
    Flora > Weeds > Marine organisms > Seaweeds > Sea grass
    Properties > Surface properties > Texture > Sediment properties > Sediment texture
    Sediments
    Thalassia testudinum K.D.Koenig, 1805 [WoRMS]
    Brackish water

Author  Top 
  • Grady, J.R.

Abstract
    Organic and carbonate carbon and textural properties of the substrates underlying Halodule wrightii and Thalassia testudinum sea grass beds in the intertidal zone of St. Andrew Bay, Florida were compared to adjacent unvegetated sand flats by physiographic divisions within the bay and to the subtidal slopes of the bay. Sea grass and sand flat sediments were principally fine-grained quartz sands. The mean particle-size of the sea grass sediments were finer-grained than those of the sand flats only in the west arm and lagoon of the bay. Size-frequency distributions of the sea grass sediments were generally slightly more negatively skewed and more leptokurtic than those of the sand flats. The sea grass sediments were less well sorted than were the sand flat sediments. The average organic and carbonate carbon contents of the sea grass beds were 1.9-fold greater than that of the sand flats but much less than of the subtidal sea grass meadows. In the areas of pollution, sea grasses were absent; near this area Holodule wrightii was the dominant sea grass.

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