Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-gvh9x Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-16T22:42:21.008Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Refugial Laminaria Abundance and Reduction in Urchin Grazing in Communities in the North-West Atlantic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

Derek W. Keats
Affiliation:
Botany Department, University of the Western Cape, Post Bag X17, Bellville 7535, South Africa

Extract

A literature review and new data are used to clarify geographical patterns of community response to release from heavy grazing by green sea urchins, Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis (O.F. Müller) within the north-west Atlantic region. Large geographical areas identified where urchin-removal experiments have not been conducted are the Passamaquoddy Bay area of the northern Bay of Fundy, the south and west coasts of Newfoundland, and southern Labrador. Within the north-west Atlantic region, there has been variation in the degree of domination by Laminaria species of post-urchin-removal communities. This is probably due, at least in part, to variation in the availability of Laminaria populations in refugia from urchin grazing. The following hypothesis is developed and given a preliminary test: in eastern Newfoundland, the absence of refugial Laminaria longicruris populations is due to periodic ice-scour. Despite the absence of significant Laminaria populations following short-term (<5 years) urchin-removal experiments in some areas, it is suggested that Laminaria spp. may be the natural, long-term community dominants in the absence of significant urchin grazing throughout the region. In view of the logistic problems involved in conducting long-term (6–15 years) urchin-removal experiments, it is suggested that urchin-removal/Laminaria-seeding experiments should be conducted within this region.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1991

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Anderson, E.K. & North, W.J., 1966. In situ studies of spore production and dispersal in the giant kelp Macrocystis. Proceedings of the Fifth International Seaweed Symposium, Halifax, August 1965 (ed. Young, E.G. and McLachlan, J.L.), pp. 7386. Pergamon.Google Scholar
Breen, P.A. & Mann, K.H., 1976. Destructive grazing of kelp by sea urchins in eastern Canada. Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 33, 12781283.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapman, A.R.O., 1981. Stability of sea urchin dominated barren grounds following destructive grazing of kelp in St Margaret's Bay, eastern Canada. Marine Biology, 62, 307311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapman, A.R.O. & Johnson, C.R., 1990. Disturbance and organization of macroalgal assemblages in the northwest Atlantic. Hydrobiologia, 192, 77121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foreman, R.E., 1977. Benthic community modification and recovery following intensive grazing by Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis. Helgoländer wissenschaftliche Meeresuntersuchungen, 30, 468484.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hagen, N.T., 1983. Destructive grazing of kelp beds by sea urchins in Vestfjorden, northern Norway. Sarsia, 68, 177190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, L.G., 1981. Studies of community succession in a sea urchin barrens area following sea urchin removal. American Zoologist, 21, 1019.Google Scholar
Himmelman, J.H., 1980. The role of the green sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis in the rocky subtidal region of Newfoundland. Canadian Technical Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 954, 92119.Google Scholar
Himmelman, J.H., 1985. Urchin feeding and macroalgal distribution in Newfoundland, eastern Canada. Le Naturaliste Canadien, 111, 337348.Google Scholar
Himmelman, J.H., Cardinal, A. & Bourget, E., 1983. Community Development Following Removal Of Urchins, Strongylocentrotus Droebachiensis From The Rocky Subtidal Zone Of The St Lawrence Estuary, Eastern Canada. Oecologia, 59, 2739.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Himmelman, J.H. & Nédélec, H., 1990. Urchin foraging and algal survival strategies in intensely grazed communities in eastern Canada. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 47, 10111026.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hooper, R.G., 1975. Bonne Bay Marine Resources. An ecological and biological assessment. Report, Parks Canada Atlantic Regional Office. Contract no. ARO74–83, vol. 1, 295 pp.; vol. 2, maps, 109 pp. [Mimeographed.]Google Scholar
Hooper, R.G., 1980. Observations on algae-grazer interactions in Newfoundland and Labrador. Canadian Technical Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 954, 120124.Google Scholar
Johnson, C.R.Mann, K.H., 1988. Diversity, patterns of adaptation, and stability of Nova Scotian kelp beds. Ecological Monographs, 58, 129154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keats, D.W., 1986. The Effects of the Experimental Removal of Green Sea Urchins, and of Ice-scour on Sublittoral Benthic Macro-algal Communities in eastern Newfoundland. PhD thesis, Memorial University Newfoundland, St John's.Google Scholar
Keats, D.W., South, G.R. & Steele, D.H., 1982. The occurrence of Agarum cribrosum (Mert.) Bory (Phaeophyta, Laminariales) in relation to some of its competitors and predators in Newfoundland. Phycologia, 21, 189191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keats, D.W., South, G.R. & Steele, D.H., 1985. Algal biomass and diversity in the upper subtidal at a pack-ice disturbed site in eastern Newfoundland. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 25, 151158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keats, D.W., South, G.R. & Steele, D.H., 1991. The effects of an experimental reduction in grazing by green sea urchins on a benthic macroalgal community in eastern Newfoundland. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 68, 181193.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lüing, K., Chapman, A.R.O. & Mann, K.H., 1978. Crossing experiments in the non-digitate complex of Laminaria from both sides of the Atlantic. Phycologia, 17, 293298.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mann, K.H., 1977. Destruction of kelp-beds by sea urchins: a cyclical phenomenon or irreversible degradation Helgoländer Wissenschaftliche Meeresuntersuchungen, 30, 455467.Google Scholar
Markham, W.E., 1980. Ice Atlas: Eastern Canadian Seaboard. Toronto: Environment Canada, Atmospheric Service.Google Scholar
Miller, R.J., 1985. Succession in sea urchin and seaweed abundance in Nova Scotia, Canada. Marine Biology, 84, 275286.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Novaczek, I., & McLachlan, J., 1986. Recolonization by algae of the sublittoral habitat of Halifax County, Nova Scotia following the demise of sea urchins. Botanica Marina, 29, 6973.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pringle, J.D., 1986. A review of urchin/macro-algal associations with a new synthesis for nearshore, eastern Canadian waters. Monografias Biologicas, 4, 191218.Google Scholar
Propp, M.V., 1977. Ecology of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis of the Barents Sea: metabolism and regulation of abundance. Biologiya Morya, Vladivostock, 1, 3951.Google Scholar
Reed, D.C., Laur, D.R. & Ebeling, A.W., 1988. Variation in algal dispersal and recruitment: the importance of episodic events. Ecological Monographs, 58, 321335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheibling, R.E., 1986. Increased macroalgal abundance following mass mortalities of sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis) along the Atlantic coast of Nova Scotia. Oecologia, 68, 186198.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
South, G.R., 1983. Benthic marine algae. In Biogeography and Ecology of the Island of Newfoundland (ed. South, G.R.), pp. 385420. The Hague: Dr W. Junk.Google Scholar
South, G.R. & Hooper, R.G., 1980. A catalogue and atlas of the benthic marine algae of the island of Newfoundland. Memorial University of Newfoundland Occasional Papers in Biology, 3, 1136.Google Scholar
South, G.R., Tittley, I., Farnham, W.F. & Keats, D.W., 1988. A survey of the benthic marine algae of southwestern New Brunswick, Canada. Rhodora-journal of the New England Botanical Club, 90, 419451.Google Scholar
Vadas, R.L., 1968. The Ecology of Agarum and the Kelp-bed Community. PhD thesis, University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Witman, J.D., 1987. Subtidal coexistence: storms, grazing mutualism, and the zonation of kelps and mussels. Ecological Monographs, 57, 167187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar