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1.
The settlement of marine larvae is influenced by a wide range of physical and biological factors. It is still poorly known how the nature of substrate and the biofilm can interact in regulating settlement patterns of invertebrate larvae. Here we use laboratory experiments focused on settlement behaviour of the barnacle Balanus amphitrite. The aim of this work is to understand whether: (i) the nature of substratum can affect biofilm formation and its structure, (ii) the nature of substratum can affect B. amphitrite larval settlement, (iii) the age of the biofilms and the nature of substrate can interact in influencing larval settlement.Four kinds of substrata (marble, quartz, glass, and cembonit) were biofilmed under laboratory conditions for 5, 10 and 20 days at the temperature of 28 °C. Settlement response was investigated with 5-day-old cyprids. Biofilms were quantitatively and qualitatively analysed by scanning electron microscopy. The settlement of B. amphitrite larvae significantly differed among substrata; also, the patterns of development of biofilm assemblages changed with substrate. In addition, the larval attractiveness of different substrates tends to disappear with biofilm age.  相似文献   

2.

Various algal diets of different lipid content and composition were used to rear batches of naupliar larvae of Balanus amphitrite. The cyprids in these larval batches differed in lipid content and were used to investigate the combined effect of cyprid lipid content and cyprid age on attachment and metamorphosis. For this purpose, cyprids were aged for 0,3 and 6 d at 8°C prior to utilization in laboratory attachment assays. The percentage attachment of cyprids with similar lipid content differed significantly among the three age categories. A strong and a weak positive relationship between cyprid lipid content and attachment were monitored in young and old cyprids, respectively. A significant interaction (two‐way ANOVA) between cyprid age and lipid content was observed, indicating that these factors jointly affect larval attachment and metamorphosis in B. amphitrite from the beginning of the cyprid stage.  相似文献   

3.
The settlement responses of Pomatoceros lamarkii (Polychaeta: Serpulidae) larvae to biofilms of varying age on slate surfaces and to dried biofilms on slate surfaces were investigated in the laboratory. Settlement experiments were performed as multi-treatment, still water assays. Larvae did not settle on clean, non-biofilmed slates but settled on biofilms up to 28 days old. Settlement intensity was closely related to the bacterial density of a biofilm. Drying a biofilmed surface for 1-2 h at 20 degrees C to simulate a single tidal emersion completely negated the former inductive effect of the biofilm. Drying also negated the larval settlement-inducing effect that normally results from the presence of conspecific adults. The settlement inhibition lasted for approximately 5 days following a single drying event. Larvae settled readily on biofilms exposed to formalin and antibiotics. Treating biofilms with formalin or antibiotics before or after drying had no effect upon larval avoidance of dried biofilms. Freeze-drying a biofilm had the same effect as aerial drying. The biofilm drying effect could not be mimicked by exposing biofilms to hyper-saline seawater. The finding that P. lamarkii larvae do not settle on dried biofilms could have significance in explaining the natural distribution of this species in the intertidal.  相似文献   

4.

How larvae of whale and dolphin epibionts settle on their fast-swimming and migrating hosts is a puzzling question in zoology. We successfully reared the larvae of the whale and dolphin barnacle Xenobalanus globicipitis to the cyprid stage. We studied the larval developmental ecology and antennular morphology in an attempt to assess whether an epibiotic lifestyle on this extreme substratum entails any unique larval specializations. Morphological parameters were compared with five other barnacle species that also inhabit extreme substrata. We found no larval specializations to a lifestyle associated with marine mammals. The external morphology of the antennules in Xenobalanus cyprids is morphologically similar to species from strikingly different substrata. We found variation only in the structures that are in physical contact with the substratum, i.e., the third segments carrying the villi-covered attachment disc. The third segments of the Xenobalanus cyprid antennules are not spear-shaped as in the stony coral barnacles, which are here used to penetrate the live tissue of their hosts. The presence of a cyprid cement gland implies that Xenobalanus uses cement protein when attaching to its cetacean host. Naupliar instars developed outside of the mantle cavity, indicating dispersal is planktonic. Our results militate against the idea that the cyprids settle during ocean migrations of their hosts. We suggest cyprids settle during coastal aggregations of the cetacean hosts. We conclude that the ecological success of barnacles has ultimately depended on a larva that with little structural alteration possesses the ability to settle on an amazingly wide array of substrata, including cetaceans.

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5.

Settlement of cultured Balanus amphitrite cyprid larvae was tested on different non-solid hydrogel surfaces. Gels consisting of alginate (highly anionic), chitosan (highly cationic), polyvinyl alcohol substituted with light-sensitive stilbazolium groups (PVA-SbQ; very low cationic) and agarose (neutral) were applied in cell culture multi-well plates. Polystyrene served as a solid surface reference. Preliminary experiments were performed to determine whether any substances leaching out of the gels could inhibit barnacle settlement. Whilst leachate from the gels revealed no toxicity towards Artemia salina nauplius larvae, PVA-SbQ in solution at and above a concentration of 0.4 ppm inhibited B. amphitrite cyprid settlement. Gels were therefore washed to avoid such effects during further testing, and toxicity and settlement tests with B. amphitrite nauplii and cyprids, respectively, applied to verify that washing was effective. Settlement was tested directly on the different test materials, followed by a quality test of non-settled larvae. All gels inhibited barnacle settlement compared to the polystyrene controls. Gels consisting of 2.5% PVA-SbQ or 0.5% agarose showed promising antifouling properties. Although some settlement occurred on 2.5% PVA-SbQ gels, metamorphosis was clearly inhibited. Only 10% of the larvae had settled on 0.5% agarose gels after 8 d. Less than 40% settlement occurred on alginate gels, as well as on 2% chitosan gels. Quality testing showed that the majority of remaining non-settled larvae in all gel experiments were able to settle when offered a suitable solid substratum.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Settlement inhibition of barnacle (Amphibalanus amphitrite) cypris larvae resulting from exposure to ultrasound was measured at three frequencies (23, 63, and 102 kHz), applied at three acoustic pressure levels (9, 15, and 22 kPa) for exposure times of 30, 150, and 300 s. The lowest settlement was observed for 23 kHz, which also induced the highest cyprid mortality. Cyprid settlement following exposure to 23 kHz at 22 kPa for 30 s was reduced by a factor of two. Observing surface exploration by the cyprids revealed an altered behaviour following exposure to ultrasound: step length was increased, while step duration, walking pace, and the fraction of cyprids exploring the surface were significantly reduced with respect to control cyprids. The basal area of juvenile barnacles, metamorphosed from ultrasound-treated cyprids was initially smaller than unexposed individuals, but normalised over two weeks' growth. Thus, ultrasound exposure effectively reduced cyprid settlement, yet metamorphosed barnacles grew normally.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Settlement rates of the high intertidal barnacle, Balanus glandula, were monitored at three sites in the rocky intertidal zone in Central California simultaneously with measurements of larval concentrations in the adjacent water column. In both 1983 and 1984, settlement rates onto vacant substrate differed among the sites by nearly two orders of magnitude. For all sampling dates, this spatial variation in settlement mirrored the spatial distribution of Balanus glandula cyprid concentration in the water column. A perfect rank correlation was found between cyprid concentrations near a site and subsequent settlement. A noteworthy observation was that the sites switched rank in their settlement rates from 1983 to 1984. This change in settlement rankings matched a switch in rankings for cyprid concentrations.Settlement itself appears to be an important cause of the spatial pattern of cyprid concentrations. Comparing the rates of settlement to estimates of the number of cyprids available at a site suggests that settlement causes a large drain on the cyprid population as a water mass passes over successive sites. No consistent spatial patterns were found in the distribution of other major plankton groups (calanoid copepods) that are similar in size to Balanus cyprids but do not settle.The large differences in settlement rates among these sites were previously shown to be a leading cause of large differences in the structure of benthic barnacle populations. The close correspondence shown here between these large differences in settlement and differences in larval concentrations suggests that nearshore oceanic processes affecting larval arrival contribute to the control of benthic community structure.  相似文献   

9.
Settlement inhibition of barnacle (Amphibalanus amphitrite) cypris larvae resulting from exposure to ultrasound was measured at three frequencies (23, 63, and 102 kHz), applied at three acoustic pressure levels (9, 15, and 22 kPa) for exposure times of 30, 150, and 300?s. The lowest settlement was observed for 23?kHz, which also induced the highest cyprid mortality. Cyprid settlement following exposure to 23?kHz at 22?kPa for 30?s was reduced by a factor of two. Observing surface exploration by the cyprids revealed an altered behaviour following exposure to ultrasound: step length was increased, while step duration, walking pace, and the fraction of cyprids exploring the surface were significantly reduced with respect to control cyprids. The basal area of juvenile barnacles, metamorphosed from ultrasound-treated cyprids was initially smaller than unexposed individuals, but normalised over two weeks' growth. Thus, ultrasound exposure effectively reduced cyprid settlement, yet metamorphosed barnacles grew normally.  相似文献   

10.
Three bacterial isolates (Micrococcus sp., Rhodovulum sp., and Vibrio sp.) from natural biofilms were investigated for their effects on cyprid settlement of Balanus amphitrite in laboratory bioassays. The inhibitive effect of these bacteria was clearly demonstrated by using a choice assay, in which cyprids settled preferentially on surfaces without bacterial pretreatment over those possessing a monospecies bacterial film. This result suggested that the inhibitive effect was mediated by direct larval contact with bacterial film surface rather than the perception of diffusible bacterial products. In a no-choice assay, monospecies bacterial films of different cell densities reduced cyprid settlement in a density-dependent manner. Vibrio sp. was the most potent inhibitor among the three isolates as it effectively inhibited cyprid settlement by relatively low-density films. The cells of Vibrio sp. were the smallest among the three isolates, suggesting that the correlation between bacterial cell density and cyprid settlement might not be merely due to the reduction of free-space availability. For all three isolates, films that were killed by formaldehyde or UV treatment were as potent as untreated, live films. These films remained inhibitive even in the presence of a strong promoter for cyprid settlement, namely conspecific settlement factor (SF), obtained from adult B. amphitrite. However, SF reverted the inhibitive effect of natural biofilms developed in the intertidal region.  相似文献   

11.
The in vitro settlement assay using cyprids of Balanus. amphitrite is an important tool in basic and applied research. The aim of this study was to quantify the effect of gregariousness within these assays, and to determine the interaction between gregariousness and container size, and settlement promoters and inhibitors. Assays with 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, and 40 cyprids in containers with a log range of surface area to volume ratios were conducted in a fully factorial design. Assays with the same range of cyprid numbers and six concentrations of the settlement promoter 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) or the inhibitor phloroglucinol were also conducted in a fully factorial design. Percentage settlement was analysed by GLM ANOVA. Significant (p < 0.05) gregarious effects were detected at > or = 5 cyprids in a well. Surface area:volume ratio had a strong effect on cyprid settlement, but this effect could be masked by overcrowding in very small wells. Gregarious interactions between only five cyprids magnified the effect of IBMX by a factor of 10, whereas phloroglucinol had no effect without gregarious interactions. The cyprid settlement bioassay is a valuable tool for basic and applied research but must be used with care.  相似文献   

12.
Gregarious behaviour of marine larvae is perhaps most clearly associated with finding a suitable habitat in a changeable or restricted environment, or with finding other conspecifics with which to mate. Prior work has shown that in settlement assays using cypris larvae of the barnacle Balanus amphitrite, gregarious interactions significantly affected the interpretation of experiments testing the activity of organic settlement promoters and inhibitors. Other studies have also shown effects of cyprid age and pheromone concentration on settlement behaviour. However, the effects of interactions between gregariousness and these two factors are not known. The aim of this study was to test the hypotheses that i) as cyprids age the effects of gregariousness become less apparent, and ii) as the duration of the experiment increases gregarious effects become more apparent, using cypris larvae of B. amphitrite and Balanus improvisus. Three age classes of cyprids were used at six densities in a fully factorial design. For B. improvisus cyprids significant gregarious effects occurred between 3 or more larvae, and although larval age and experiment duration had significant main effects, there were no interactions between these important factors and gregariousness. For B. amphitrite cyprids significant gregarious effects also occurred with 3 larvae per well, though this effect was strongly dependent upon experiment duration. B. amphitrite cyprid sensitivity to conspecific cues does not change with age, although increasing experiment duration and age interact to increase settlement. Differences between species may be due to different thresholds to conspecific larval cues, or B. improvisus cyprids release much more larval temporary adhesive during exploration.  相似文献   

13.
Understanding of factors influencing settlement(attachment and metamorphosis) of marine invertebratelarvae is of great importance in aquaculture andcontrol of biofouling. The influence of two factors onsettlement of larvae was assessed from two separateinvestigations: 1, the influence of age (endogenousfactor) on cyprids of the barnacle Balanusamphitrite; and 2, the influence of a microbial film(exogenous factor) on pediveligers of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis.The settlement response of cypris larvae of B.amphitrite was found to be age-dependent. Oldercyprids responded more readily to settlement factorsthan newly molted ones. In M.galloprovincialis, competent pediveligers settled inresponse to a microbial filmed surface but not toan unfilmed surface. Moreover, a factor with MW of lessthan 5000 dalton, derived from culture medium of abacterial strain C1.1 (Pseudomonas-Alteromonasgroup), induced the settlement of M. galloprovincialis larvae.Thus, marine invertebrate larvae may require a periodof competence acquisition, during which they arepoorly responsive to settlement inducers. Uponacquisition of competence, larvae readily respondto external cues (e.g. microbial film, bacterialextracellular products).  相似文献   

14.

A major driving force to mechanistic studies of barnacle gregarious settlement is to contribute to an understanding of observed patterns of settlement in nature. In particular, how cyprids perceive adult conspecifics and how they discriminate between conspecific and allospecific barnacles are questions which have taxed researchers for nearly 50 years. The putative, active component of adult barnacles to which the cyprids respond has long been known to be a glycoprotein, referred to here as the settlement‐inducing protein complex (SIPC). The present study examines the discriminatory abilities of laboratory‐reared Balanus amphitrite and wild Semibalanus balanoides cyprids at settlement. Using a recently developed nitrocellulose membrane‐choice settlement assay, laboratory studies revealed that both species settled at a significantly higher rate on regions of membrane on which crude conspecific SIPC had been adsorbed compared to untreated regions. Moreover, when offered a choice between conspecific and allospecific SIPC, a trend to greater settlement on the conspecific regions was observed. The membrane assay was also evaluated in field trials using real‐time video footage of cyprid searching behaviour. Of 211 S. balanoides cyprids recorded during exploratory behaviour, only one settled. Exploratory behaviour was, however, clearly associated with regions of the membrane treated with either conspecific or allospecific (B. Amphitrite) SIPC compared to untreated regions. These results are generally in accord with previous reports on the discriminatory abilities of barnacle cyprids and suggest that the membrane assay may be usefully applied to field studies of settlement behaviour.  相似文献   

15.
Nick Aldred  Guozhu Li  Ye Gao 《Biofouling》2013,29(6):673-683
Zwitterionic polymers such as poly(sulfobetaine methacrylate) (polySBMA) and poly(carboxybetaine methacrylate) (polyCBMA) have demonstrated impressive fouling-resistance against proteins and mammalian cells. In this paper, the effects of these surface chemistries on the settlement and behavior of an ubiquitous fouling organism, the cypris larva of the barnacle Balanus amphitrite (=Amphibalanus amphitrite), were studied in the laboratory. Conventional settlement assays and behavioral analysis of cyprids using Noldus Ethovision 3.1 demonstrated significant differences in settlement and behavior on different surfaces. Cyprids did not settle on the polySBMA or polyCBMA surfaces over the course of the assay, whereas settlement on glass occurred within expected limits. Individual components of cyprid behavior were shown to differ significantly between glass, polySBMA and polyCBMA. Cyprids also responded differently to the two zwitterionic surfaces. On polySBMA, cyprids were unwilling or unable to settle, whereas on polyCBMA cyprids did not attempt exploration and left the surface quickly. In neither case was toxicity observed. It is concluded that a zwitterionic approach to fouling-resistant surface development has considerable potential in marine applications.  相似文献   

16.
Recruitment is often a major influence on the spatial distribution of populations of benthic marine invertebrates, but the contributions of different components of recruitment are not well known, with the added complication that the relative importance of various life-history processes may be scale-dependent. Previously, we have shown that over a large scale across a mangrove (Avicennia marina) forest in southeastern Australia, settlement of the barnacle Elminius covertus explained its patterns of recruitment, which in turn explained the distribution of adults on mangrove pneumatophores. Post-settlement mortality had little influence on this pattern. In contrast, small-scale vertical distributions of adult barnacles along individual pneumatophores were determined by the pattern of recruitment, which differed from the pattern of settlement, so post-settlement mortality determined the vertical patterns of adults.

In this study, we tested whether larval supply and/or settlement behavior influence the observed settlement patterns of E. covertus across a forest (from seaward to landward zones). We also tested whether larval supply could explain the vertical settlement patterns along the pneumatophores. A pumping system was used to collect cypris larvae from seaward, mid and landward zones of a mangrove forest and an adjacent, unvegetated shore and from three heights above the sediment surface. We also used transplantation of wooden stakes bearing microbial films and barnacle recruits between horizontal zones of the forest to determine whether settlement was influenced by these films or recruits.

Both cyprid supply and cyprid behavior were important factors in determining the patterns of settlement of E. covertus across the forest. Cyprid supply was a result of three-fold differences in immersion times of different (landward, mid and seaward) zones across the forest and a decrease in density of cyprids in the water column from the seaward zone of the forest to the landward sections. In the absence of mangroves immediately adjacent to the forest, there was no temporally consistent difference in cyprid density across the shore and even the differences in immersion time did not produce consistent differences in cyprid supply across the shore. Wooden substrata that had been immersed at seaward sections of the forest attracted consistently more settlers than substrata immersed initially at other sections of the forest and settlement could be induced beyond the normal distribution of adults of E. covertus by stakes transplanted from the seaward zone.

The vertical settlement pattern could not be explained by the supply of cyprids, suggesting that larval behavior must determine the vertical settlement pattern.  相似文献   


17.
In this study, we investigated the effect of mono-species and multi-species biofilms on larval attachment of the bryozoan Bugula neritina. The effect of biofilms was examined through a double-dish choice bioassay in which larvae were given the choice of attaching either to a clean surface of a container or to surfaces covered with biofilms. Larvae attached in response to mono-species biofilms of 5 out of 7 bacterial isolates from a subtidal region, but they avoided surfaces covered by biofilms of 7 out of 8 isolates obtained from an intertidal region. In the follow-up choice experiments with multi-species biofilms developed for 2 days, 7 days, 14 days, 28 days and 30 days, larvae preferentially attached to filmed surfaces over the unfilmed surfaces. When biofilms from 2 different tidal regions (intertidal and subtidal) were offered as choices in the double-dish bioassay, larvae in all cases attached on the subtidal biofilms. Two-day-old subtidal biofilms with low densities of bacteria induced significantly higher (p < 0.05) attachment than did 30- day-old intertidal biofilms, which had high bacterial density. Terminal Restriction Fragment Polymorphism (T-RFLP) analysis revealed that the bacterial communities were substantially different in the subtidal and intertidal regions during all periods of the experiment. Attachment of B. neritina on subtidal biofilms did not depend on the bacterial density but rather was negatively correlated with diatom density, thickness of the exopolysaccharide layer and biofilm age. Our results suggest that the larvae of B. neritina can discriminate between biofilmed and clean surfaces and between biofilms developed under different tidal zones.  相似文献   

18.
Flow patterns adjacent to shore may prevent or aid shorewardmigration of benthic invertebrate larvae. We hypothesized thata front at the mouth of Sunset Bay, Oregon, prevents shorewarddispersal of larvae, significantly altering settlement of mussellarvae and barnacle cyprids. Settlement was measured at threesets of moorings (three moorings per site) distributed acrossthe front at Sunset Bay. From 6 July to 4 September 2000, sampleswere collected roughly every other day. Concurrently, we madevertical zooplankton tows adjacent to each mooring site andcollected physical oceanographic data. During upwelling-favorablewinds, the front was always present at the bay mouth, separatingsignificantly cooler, saltier and denser offshore water fromthat within the bay. During downwelling winds, the front brokedown and we found no significant difference in the surface physicaloceanographic parameters across the bay mouth. During upwelling,the concentration of mussel larvae was higher seaward of thefront than landward, but there was no significant differencein concentration during downwelling, suggesting that the frontmay act as a barrier to the shoreward dispersal of mussels.Mussel settlement was too low and sporadic to allow statisticalanalysis. There was no difference in cyprid concentrations acrossthe bay mouth whether the front was present or not. Cyprid settlementwas, however, nearly an order of magnitude lower at mooringsseaward of the front than at those landward. A significant cross-correlationwas found between settlement at the offshore mooring and tidalrange (r = 0.464, lag = 0 days) and between settlement at themid and inner moorings and downwelling winds (r = 0.532 midbay, r = 0.532 inner bay, lag = 0 days). Seaward of the front,settlement varied with tidal range, while landward of the front,most settlement occurred as brief pulses during downwellingwinds, periods when the front was not present. We found largedifferences in the distribution of cyprids, and mussel larvaeand cyprid settlement relative to the front; larval distributionsand settlement varied with upwelling versus downwelling windsand was due to differences in the very nearshore (i.e. within100–1000 m of shore) coastal oceanography.  相似文献   

19.
Increased settlement on bacterial biofilms has been demonstrated for a number of marine invertebrate larvae, but the nature of the cue(s) responsible is not well understood. We tested the hypothesis that the bay barnacle Balanus improvisus utilizes the bacterial signal molecules N‐acylhomoserine lactones (AHLs) as a cue for the selection of sites for permanent attachment. Single species biofilms of the AHL‐producing bacteria Vibrio anguillarum, Aeromonas hydrophila and Sulfitobacter sp. BR1 were attractive to settling cypris larvae of B. improvisus. However, when AHL production was inactivated, either by mutation of the AHL synthetic genes or by expression of an AHL‐degrading gene (aiiA), the ability of the bacteria to attract cyprids was abolished. In addition, cyprids actively explored biofilms of E. coli expressing the recombinant AHL synthase genes luxI from Vibrio fischeri (3‐oxo‐C6‐HSL), rhlI from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (C4‐HSL/C6‐HSL), vanI from V. anguillarum (3‐oxo‐C10‐HSL) and sulI from Sulfitobacter sp. BR1 (C4‐HSL, 3‐hydroxy‐C6‐HSL, C8‐HSL and 3‐hydroxy‐C10‐HSL), but not E. coli that did not produce AHLs. Finally, synthetic AHLs (C8‐HSL, 3‐oxo‐C10‐HSL and C12‐HSL) at concentrations similar to those found within natural biofilms (5 μm ) resulted in increased cyprid settlement. Thus, B. improvisus cypris exploration of and settlement on biofilms appears to be mediated by AHL‐signalling bacteria in the laboratory. This adds to our understanding of how quorum sensing inhibition may be used as for biofouling control. Nonetheless, the significance of our results for larvae settling naturally in the field, and the mechanisms that underlay the observed responses to AHLs, is as yet unknown.  相似文献   

20.
In northwest Europe, sheltered rocky shores are dominated by fucoid canopy algae and barnacles are rare, although the latter are extremely abundant on exposed shores. The supply of the intertidal barnacle Semibalanus balanoides (L.) to sheltered, fucoid dominated rocky shores was investigated to determine the importance of larval supply in limiting the abundance of adults in shelter. Larval supply was measured at two spatial scales, at the scale of shore (100s of metres), by comparing larval concentrations at exposed and sheltered sites, and at a smaller spatial scale (m), by examining the role of fucoid canopies in limiting supply to the substratum. Replicate plankton trawls were carried out above the intertidal zone at high water at two sheltered sites and nearby exposed headlands. The concentration of S. balanoides cyprid larvae was significantly higher at the sheltered sites on two out of three sampling occasions with up to 14 times greater larvae on one occasion than the nearby exposed site. The effect of the macroalgal canopy on supply to the substratum was assessed in two ways: directly, by pumping water from the substratum in areas with and without Ascophyllum nodosum (L.) Le Jolis, and indirectly by measuring cyprid settlement in a canopy-manipulation experiment. Pumped plankton samples from mid tide level showed that the A. nodosum canopy did not form a barrier to larval supply and may have had a positive effect on larval concentrations at the substratum. Cyprid settlement was assessed in the mid shore A. nodosum and low shore Fucus serratus L. zones to areas with canopy algae (but protected from the sweeping effects of macroalgal fronds) and without canopy. Settlement over three consecutive 24-h periods showed a consistent pattern; settlement was consistently lower beneath the F. serratus canopy than in cleared areas, suggesting that this algal species forms a barrier, limiting supply of cyprid larvae to the substratum.  相似文献   

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