Lilley Stacie A, Schiel David R
Marine Ecology Research Group, School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Oecologia. 2006 Jul;148(4):672-81. doi: 10.1007/s00442-006-0411-6. Epub 2006 Apr 6.
Habitat-forming species increase spatial complexity and alter local environmental conditions, often facilitating a diversified assemblage of plants and animals. Removal of dominant species, therefore, can potentially lead to pronounced changes in diversity and community structure through a series of negative and positive interactions involving several components of the community. Here we test community responses to the deletion of the dominant, canopy-forming alga Hormosira banksii from the mid-intertidal zone of wave-protected rocky shores in southern New Zealand. This species was removed in winter (July) from three 3x3-m areas at each of two platforms (Kaikoura and Moeraki) on the east coast of the South Island. Initially, 59 taxa occurred in stands, but there were only four algal species with greater than 5% cover and three mobile invertebrate species with more than five individuals per 0.25 m(2). By 6 months after Hormosira removal, most fucoid and coralline algae had burned off, and there were blooms of ephemeral algae in the removal plots, but almost no change within controls. After 2 years, diversity declined by 44% relative to controls at Kaikoura and 36% at Moeraki, and the amount of bare space had increased by tenfold at Kaikoura and twofold at Moeraki. Few sessile or mobile invertebrates were present. Recruitment of Hormosira occurred after 14 months in the removal plots. At this time, a "press" disturbance was initiated into one half of each removal plot to test the effects of continued removal of Hormosira on diversity. Similar "end-points" of the control and "press" removal plots were not reached after 2 years, and even after Hormosira recruitment into the original "pulse" experiment there was little recovery of the community. In this mid-intertidal system with considerable thermal stress, and perhaps in others with few perennial species, diversity and community structure can critically depend on positive associations with a single dominant species.
形成栖息地的物种会增加空间复杂性并改变当地环境条件,通常会促进动植物的多样化聚集。因此,去除优势物种可能会通过一系列涉及群落多个组成部分的正负相互作用,导致多样性和群落结构发生显著变化。在这里,我们测试了群落对从新西兰南部受海浪保护的岩石海岸潮间带中部去除优势的形成冠层的藻类——班氏 Hormosira 的反应。该物种于冬季(7月)从南岛东海岸两个平台(凯库拉和莫埃拉基)的每个平台的三个3×3米区域中被移除。最初,群落中有59个分类单元,但只有四种藻类的覆盖率超过5%,以及三种活动无脊椎动物物种,每0.25平方米有超过五个个体。在去除 Hormosira 后的6个月内,大多数墨角藻和珊瑚藻消失了,去除区域出现了短暂藻类的大量繁殖,但对照区域几乎没有变化。2年后,凯库拉的多样性相对于对照下降了44%,莫埃拉基下降了36%,凯库拉的裸露空间增加了十倍,莫埃拉基增加了两倍。几乎没有固着或活动的无脊椎动物。去除区域在14个月后出现了 Hormosira 的重新生长。此时,在每个去除区域的一半引入了“持续压力”干扰,以测试持续去除 Hormosira 对多样性的影响。2年后,对照区域和“持续压力”去除区域没有达到相似的“终点”,即使在 Hormosira 重新生长到原来的“脉冲”实验区域后,群落也几乎没有恢复。在这个具有相当热应力的潮间带中部系统中,也许在其他多年生物种较少的系统中,多样性和群落结构可能严重依赖于与单一优势物种的正相关关系。