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MEPS 203:81-94 (2000)
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Abstract
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Primary succession on a seasonal tropical rocky shore: the relative roles of spatial heterogeneity and herbivory
Gray A. Williams1,*, Mark S. Davies2, Sanjay Nagarkar1
1Department of Ecology and Biodiversity, The Swire Institute of Marine Science, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulan Road, Hong Kong
2Ecology Centre, University of Sunderland, Sunderland SR1 3SD, United Kingdom
*E-mail: hrsbwga@hkucc.hku.hk

ABSTRACT: Hong Kong is within the tropics and has a seasonal climate. In winter, shores support patches of ephemeral macroalgae and areas of seemingly bare rock close to crevices where molluscan herbivores are abundant. Using a factorial design of
herbivore exclusions in areas far and close to crevices, the development of algal assemblages was monitored in mid-shore, cleared areas, in winter. To estimate the role of herbivore mucus deposition, half the treatments received a mucus application. Algal
development was estimated from macroalgal and biofilm development and chlorophyll a levels. In all areas, biofilms (diatoms, unicellular cyanobacteria) developed rapidly in herbivore exclusions followed by ephemeral macroalgae (Enteromorpha
spp. and Porphyra suborbiculata). In herbivore access treatments, however, the algal assemblage was influenced by treatment location; few macroalgae developed in areas close to crevices, and the rock was dominated by cyanobacteria. A
negative relationship between macroalgae and biofilms suggested that ephemeral algae were competitively dominant. In areas distant from herbivore refuges, ephemeral macroalgae did develop, illustrating that the effectiveness of molluscan herbivores was
limited to 50 to 100 cm from these refuges. The absence of large herbivorous fish, and the sparse numbers of herbivorous crabs at this site, means that algae can achieve a spatial escape from consumption, and where this occurs competition between
producers is important in assemblage development. Mucus appeared to play a limited role, only sometimes stimulating initial stages of unicellular cyanobacteria and macroalgae. With the onset of summer, macroalgae died back, and rock space became available
for colonization. Unicellular cyanobacteria developed rapidly but were replaced in all treatments by the encrusting macroalga, Hapalospongidion gelatinosum, which dominated treatments until the end of the experiment. On seasonal, tropical shores
processes influencing community structure can, therefore, be temporally variable and their relative importance, even at the same shore level, can change with season. Erratum
KEY WORDS: Biofilm · Cyanobacteria · Herbivory · Hong Kong · Mucus · Spatial heterogeneity · Succession · Tropical rocky shore
Full text in pdf format

Published in MEPS Vol.
203
(2000) on September 18
Print ISSN: 0171-8630; Online ISSN: 1616-1599.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 2000
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