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藻类与植食性腹足类动物之间的相互作用对低潮间带海藻群落结构的影响。

Effects of interactions between algae and grazing gastropods on the structure of a low-shore intertidal algal community.

作者信息

Underwood A J, Jernakoff P

机构信息

Zoology Building, School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, 2006, N.S.W., Australia.

出版信息

Oecologia. 1981 Mar;48(2):221-233. doi: 10.1007/BF00347968.

Abstract

At low levels on shores in New South Wales, foliose algae are abundant and often occupy all substrata; microalgal grazing gastropods are rare or absent. At higher levels, foliose algae are sparse or absent and grazing gastropods are abundant. Hypotheses for the causes of the lower vertical limits of distribution of these grazers include the effects of increased predation or the deleterious physiological effects of increased period of submergence at lower levels on the shore. Alternatively, the presence of the algae, because they occupy space and deprive the grazers of substratum for feeding, may prevent the downward movement, or survival of the grazers at low levels. Under the first two of these hypotheses, algae are able to colonize and grow in low-shore areas as an indirect result of factors which remove grazers. Under the third hypothesis, the algae are directly responsible for the lack of grazers.Experimental clearings of the low-shore algae and introductions of the mid-shore limpets Cellana tramoserica and Siphonaria denticulata were used to test these hypotheses. C. tramoserica grazes microalgae and removes them from the substratum, preventing colonization. S. denticulata, in contrust, crops the algae, leaving a visible cover of algae on the substratum, which can grow rapidly. Because of its method of feeding, S. denticulata had no measurable impact on the rates of colonization, nor on the dry weights of algae, compared with those of ungrazed areas. C. tramoserica could keep cleared areas tree from foliose algae, but only when the limpets were mainfained in great density (10 per 900 cm). They were less effective where wave-action was greater.Neither species of limpets could survive when placed onto beds of mature algae, because they had no substratum on which to cling and were swept away by the waves. C. tramoserica did not invade clearings below their lower limit of distribution where they had to move over a bed of foliose algae. Few C. tramoserica moved directly downshore into cleared areas. When placed on bare rock within low-shore beds of algae of different ages, S. denticulata remained amongst the algae and maintained their tissue-weights. Few C. tramoserica remained in areas with well-developed algae, compared with areas having sparse algal growth. Those Cellana which remained amongst well-developed algae lost weight, whereas limpets in areas with less algal growth mammtained their weights. In experimental cages in low-shore beds of algae, where the limpets were inaccessible to potential predators, C. tramoserica lost weight and died. On cleared areas they survived for many weeks, but lost weight and died as algae grew and covered the substratum. In the absence of predation, the micro-algal grazer C. tramoserica could not survive in lowshore areas because algae grew too fast and occupied the substratum, making it inaccessible for the limpets to graze; the algae, once grown beyond small sporelings, are not a suitable food-source for C. tramoserica, and the loss of weight and death of these limpets is attributable to starvation.The lower limit of distribution of C. tramoserica is not due to the direct effects of physical factors associated with prolonged submersion, nor to the impact of predators, but is apparently determined by the presence of rapidly growing, extensive beds of foliose algae at low levels on the shore. The cause of the limit of distribution of S. denticulata is not yet known and predation may prove to be important. Removal of S. denticulata from low-shore algal beds would not, however, affect the domination of substrata by algae. Grazing by S. denticulata at very great density had no effect on algal cover nor weight. In the intertidal community studied, the persistence of a low-shore algal zone, bounded above by abundant grazers is not influenced by the activities of predators, but is a direct result of interactions between the grazers and the algae.

摘要

在新南威尔士州海岸的低海拔区域,叶状藻数量丰富,常常占据所有基质;以微藻为食的腹足类动物稀少或不存在。在较高海拔区域,叶状藻稀少或不存在,而食草腹足类动物数量众多。关于这些食草动物分布下限较低的原因的假说包括:捕食增加的影响,或者海岸较低位置淹没时间增加对其有害的生理影响。或者,藻类的存在,因为它们占据空间并剥夺了食草动物的进食基质,可能会阻止食草动物向下移动或在低海拔区域生存。在前两种假说下,藻类能够在低海岸区域定殖并生长,这是去除食草动物的因素的间接结果。在第三种假说下,藻类直接导致了食草动物的缺乏。通过对低海岸藻类进行实验性清除,并引入中海岸帽贝Cellana tramoserica和Siphonaria denticulata来检验这些假说。C. tramoserica以微藻为食并将它们从基质上清除,阻止其定殖。相比之下,S. denticulata啃食藻类,在基质上留下可见的藻类覆盖物,这些藻类可以迅速生长。由于其进食方式,与未被啃食的区域相比,S. denticulata对定殖率和藻类干重没有可测量的影响。C. tramoserica可以使清除区域没有叶状藻,但只有当帽贝保持高密度(每900平方厘米10个)时才行。在波浪作用较大的地方,它们的效果较差。当放置在成熟藻类的床层上时,这两种帽贝都无法存活,因为它们没有可附着的基质,会被海浪冲走。C. tramoserica不会侵入其分布下限以下的清除区域,在那里它们必须在叶状藻床上移动。很少有C. tramoserica直接向下游移动到清除区域。当放置在不同年龄的低海岸藻类床层中的裸岩上时,S. denticulata留在藻类中间并保持其组织重量。与藻类生长稀疏的区域相比,很少有C. tramoserica留在藻类生长良好的区域。那些留在藻类生长良好区域的Cellana体重减轻,而藻类生长较少区域中的帽贝保持其体重。在低海岸藻类床层的实验笼子里,在那里帽贝不会受到潜在捕食者的攻击,C. tramoserica体重减轻并死亡。在清除区域,它们存活了许多周,但随着藻类生长并覆盖基质,它们体重减轻并死亡。在没有捕食的情况下,微藻食草动物C. tramoserica无法在低海岸区域生存,因为藻类生长太快并占据了基质,使帽贝无法进食;一旦藻类生长超过小幼苗阶段,它们就不是C. tramoserica合适的食物来源,这些帽贝体重减轻和死亡可归因于饥饿。C. tramoserica分布下限不是由于与长时间淹没相关的物理因素的直接影响,也不是由于捕食者的影响,而是显然由海岸低海拔区域快速生长、广泛分布的叶状藻床的存在所决定。S. denticulata分布下限的原因尚不清楚,捕食可能被证明很重要。然而,从低海岸藻类床层中去除S. denticulata不会影响藻类对基质的主导。S. denticulata在非常高的密度下啃食对藻类覆盖和重量没有影响。在所研究的潮间带群落中,以丰富的食草动物为界的低海岸藻类带的持续存在不受捕食者活动的影响,而是食草动物和藻类之间相互作用的直接结果。

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