A new mini box corer for sampling muddy bottoms in antarctic shallow waters

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Abstract

A new Mini Box Corer (MBC-GEAMB) was developed for bottom sampling in Antarctic shallow waters down to 100 m depth from a small vessel. It consists of a detachable stainless steel box with a total sampling area of 0.0625 m2, and a closing arm with a detachable blade without an external frame. MBC allowed stratified bottom sampling and good quality samples comparable to those obtained through diving. A comparison between the MBC-GEAMB and a 0.056 m2 van Veen grab (VV) was undertaken for the benthic macrofaunal composition in Admiralty Bay, King George Island (Antarctica). MBC and VV samples were taken from three depths (20, 30 and 60m) in two sites. Total densities sampled with the MBC were up to 10 times higher than those obtained with van Veen grab. VV samples might lead to faunistic abundance underestimation compared to the MBC samples. Besides, MBC showed a higher performance on discriminating different sites as regards total macrofaunal density. It is suggested that MBC could be employed as an efficient remote sampling device for shallow-waters where direct sampling by SCUBA was not advisable. © 2009 Tecpar.

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APA

Echeverría, C. A., Lavrado, H. P., Campos, L., & de Paiva, P. C. (2009). A new mini box corer for sampling muddy bottoms in antarctic shallow waters. Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology, 52(3), 629–636. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1516-89132009000300015

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