Marine Science Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA.
Ecology. 2011 Nov;92(11):2108-16. doi: 10.1890/11-0377.1.
We took advantage of regional differences in environmental forcing and consumer abundance to examine the relative importance of nutrient availability (bottom-up), grazing pressure (top-down), and storm waves (disturbance) in determining the standing biomass and net primary production (NPP) of the giant kelp Macrocystis pyrifera in central and southern California. Using a nine-year data set collected from 17 sites we show that, despite high densities of sea urchin grazers and prolonged periods of low nutrient availability in southern California, NPP by giant kelp was twice that of central California where nutrient concentrations were consistently high and sea urchins were nearly absent due to predation by sea otters. Waves associated with winter storms were consistently higher in central California, and the loss of kelp biomass to winter wave disturbance was on average twice that of southern California. These observations suggest that the more intense wave disturbance in central California limited NPP by giant kelp under otherwise favorable conditions. Regional patterns of interannual variation in NPP were similar to those of wave disturbance in that year-to-year variation in disturbance and NPP were both greater in southern California. Our findings provide strong evidence that regional differences in wave disturbance overwhelmed those of nutrient supply and grazing intensity to determine NPP by giant kelp. The important role of disturbance in controlling NPP revealed by our study is likely not unique to giant kelp forests, as vegetation dynamics in many systems are dominated by post-disturbance succession with climax communities being relatively uncommon. The effects of disturbance frequency may be easier to detect in giant kelp because it is fast growing and relatively short lived, with cycles of disturbance and recovery occurring on time scales of years. Much longer data sets (decades to centuries) will likely be needed to properly evaluate the role of disturbance relative to other processes in determining patterns of NPP in other systems.
我们利用环境胁迫和消费者丰度的区域差异,来检验养分可利用性(底生作用)、放牧压力(顶生作用)和风暴波(干扰)在决定加利福尼亚中部和南部巨型海藻巨藻的现存量和净初级生产力(NPP)方面的相对重要性。我们使用从 17 个地点收集的九年数据集表明,尽管在加利福尼亚南部有高密度的海胆食草动物和长时间的低养分可利用性,但巨型海藻的 NPP 是加利福尼亚中部的两倍,那里的养分浓度一直很高,而且由于海獭的捕食,海胆几乎不存在。与冬季风暴相关的波在加利福尼亚中部一直较高,冬季波干扰导致的巨藻生物量损失平均是加利福尼亚南部的两倍。这些观察结果表明,加利福尼亚中部更强烈的波干扰限制了在其他有利条件下巨型海藻的 NPP。NPP 的年际变化与波干扰的区域模式相似,即干扰和 NPP 的年际变化在加利福尼亚南部都更大。我们的研究结果提供了强有力的证据,表明波干扰的区域差异超过了养分供应和放牧强度的差异,从而决定了巨型海藻的 NPP。我们的研究揭示了干扰在控制 NPP 方面的重要作用,这可能不仅局限于巨型海藻林,因为许多系统中的植被动态都以干扰后的演替为主,而顶级群落相对较少。干扰频率的影响在巨型海藻中可能更容易被察觉,因为它生长迅速,寿命相对较短,干扰和恢复的周期在几年的时间尺度上发生。要正确评估在其他系统中确定 NPP 模式时,干扰相对于其他过程的作用,可能需要更长的数据集(几十年到几个世纪)。