Miller Robert J, Etter Ron J
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, Massachusetts 02125, USA.
Ecology. 2008 Feb;89(2):452-62. doi: 10.1890/06-1099.1.
Dramatic shifts in community composition occur between vertical and horizontal rocky surfaces in subtidal environments worldwide, yet the forces mediating this transition are poorly understood. Vertical rock walls are often covered by lush, diverse communities of sessile suspension-feeding invertebrates, while adjacent horizontal substrates are dominated by algae, or corals in the tropics. Multiple factors, including light, sedimentation, water flow, and predation have been proposed to explain this pattern, but experimental tests of these hypotheses are lacking. We manipulated light level and predation to test whether variation in these mechanisms could be responsible for the shift in composition of sessile communities between vertical and horizontal surfaces in the rocky subtidal Gulf of Maine. Shaded horizontally oriented granite plots were dominated by invertebrates (e.g., ascidians, barnacles, bryozoans) after 25 months. Unshaded plots were dominated by macroalgae, which was virtually absent in shaded plots. Exclusion of grazers with cages had no effect on percent cover of invertebrates or algae. Preferential settlement of invertebrate larvae to shaded plots, due to larval behaviors such as negative phototaxis, did not seem to play a role. Shading likely affects post-settlement mortality of invertebrates by alleviating competition for space with algae, although greater abundance of micropredators in algal-dominated communities could also be important. Communities on shaded plots lacked many taxa present on natural wall communities, likely due to greater disturbance on horizontal substrates and/or lack of sufficient time for colonization of these taxa. These results suggest that light plays a key role in controlling the structure, composition, and function of shallow subtidal communities.
在全球潮下带环境中,垂直和水平岩石表面之间的群落组成会发生显著变化,然而介导这种转变的力量却鲜为人知。垂直的岩壁通常覆盖着繁茂、多样的固着性悬浮取食无脊椎动物群落,而相邻的水平基质则以藻类为主,在热带地区则以珊瑚为主。人们提出了多种因素,包括光照、沉积作用、水流和捕食作用来解释这种模式,但缺乏对这些假设的实验验证。我们通过控制光照水平和捕食作用,来测试这些机制的变化是否可能导致缅因湾潮下带岩石区垂直和水平表面上固着群落组成的转变。25个月后,水平放置的有阴影的花岗岩区域以无脊椎动物(如被囊动物、藤壶、苔藓虫)为主。无阴影的区域则以大型藻类为主,而在有阴影的区域几乎没有大型藻类。用笼子排除食草动物对无脊椎动物或藻类的覆盖百分比没有影响。由于幼虫的负趋光性等行为,无脊椎动物幼虫优先在有阴影的区域定居,这似乎并没有起到作用。遮光可能通过减轻与藻类对空间的竞争来影响无脊椎动物的定居后死亡率,尽管在以藻类为主的群落中,微型捕食者数量更多也可能很重要。有阴影区域的群落缺少许多自然岩壁群落中存在的分类群,这可能是由于水平基质受到的干扰更大和/或这些分类群缺乏足够的定殖时间。这些结果表明,光照在控制浅潮下带群落的结构、组成和功能方面起着关键作用。