Sousa Wayne P, Schroeter Stephen C, Gaines Steven D
Department of Zoology, University of California, 94720, Berkeley, California, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California, 90007, Los Angeles, California.
Oecologia. 1981 Mar;48(3):297-307. doi: 10.1007/BF00346486.
The hypothesis that sea urchin grazing and interactions with turf-forming red algae prevent large brown algae from forming an extensive canopy in the low intertidal zone of southern California was tested with field experiments at two study sites. Experimental removal of sea urchins resulted in rapid algal recruitment. Crustose coralline algae which typically dominate the substratum in areas with dense urchin populations were quickly overgrown by several species of short-lived green, brown and red algae. The removal of urchins also significantly increased the recruitment of two long-lived species of large brown algae (Egregia laevigata and Cystoseira osmundacea at one study site and E. laevigata and Halidrys dioica at the other). The experimental plots at both sites were eventually dominated by perennial red algae.A two-factorial experiment demonstrated that sea urchin grazing and preemption of space by red algae in areas where urchins are less abundant are responsible for the rarity of large brown algae in the low intertidal of southern California. The three dominant perennial red algae, Gigartina canaliculata, Laurencia pacifica and Gastroclonium coulteri, recruit seasonally from settled spores but can rapidly fill open space with vigorous vegetative growth throughout the year. These species encroach laterally into space created by the deaths of large brown algae or by other disturbances. Once extensive turfs of these red algae are established further invasion is inhibited. This interaction of algae which proliferate vegetatively with algae which recruit only from settled spores is analogous to those which occur between solitary and colonial marine invertebrates and between solitary and cloning terrestrial plants.It is suggested that a north-south gradient in the abundance of vegetatively propagating species, in grazing intensity and in the frequency of space-clearing disturbances, may account for latitudinal variation in intertidal algal community structure along the Pacific coast of North America.
关于海胆啃食以及与形成草皮的红藻之间的相互作用会阻止大型褐藻在南加利福尼亚州低潮间带形成广泛覆盖层的假说,在两个研究地点通过野外实验进行了验证。实验性去除海胆导致藻类迅速繁殖。在海胆数量密集的区域通常占据基质的壳状珊瑚藻很快就被几种短命的绿藻、褐藻和红藻所覆盖。去除海胆还显著增加了两种大型长寿褐藻(在一个研究地点为光滑巨藻和囊叶藻,在另一个研究地点为光滑巨藻和二歧叉节藻)的繁殖。两个地点的实验样地最终都被多年生红藻所主导。一项双因素实验表明,在海胆数量较少的区域,海胆的啃食以及红藻对空间的抢占是导致南加利福尼亚州低潮间带大型褐藻稀少的原因。三种主要的多年生红藻,即细管蜈蚣藻、太平洋凹顶藻和库尔特氏胃叶藻,从沉降的孢子季节性繁殖,但全年都能通过旺盛的营养生长迅速填充空旷空间。这些物种横向侵入由大型褐藻死亡或其他干扰所形成的空间。一旦这些红藻形成广泛的草皮,进一步的入侵就会受到抑制。这种通过营养繁殖的藻类与仅从沉降孢子繁殖的藻类之间的相互作用,类似于单独生活和群体生活的海洋无脊椎动物之间以及单独生活和克隆的陆生植物之间发生的相互作用。有人提出,营养繁殖物种的丰富度、啃食强度以及空间清理干扰频率的南北梯度,可能解释了北美太平洋沿岸潮间带藻类群落结构的纬度变化。