EFFECTS OF WOUNDING BY THE HERBIVOROUS SNAILS LITTORINA SITKANA AND L. SCUTULATA (MOLLUSCA) ON GROWTH AND REPRODUCTION OF THE INTERTIDAL ALGA FUCUS DISTICHUS (PHAEOPHYTA)1 |
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Authors: | Kathryn L. Van Alstyne |
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Abstract: | Small (3–7 cm long) Fucus distichus ssp. edentatus (de la Pyl.) Pow. Plants were tagged at three sites in which densities of the herbivorous snails Littorina sitkana and L. scutulata ranged from 367–4690 animals · M-2. From April–August 1986, the growth rate, degree of wounding, and reproductive status of individual thalli were monitored at 2–4 week intervals. Grazer-inflicted damage to the thalli varied within and among sites. Mean growth rates at the site with low densities of littorines were about twice those at the site with intermediate densities and about four times those at the high density site. At the site with high densities of littorines, F. distichus growth rates were negatively correlated with the degree to which the plants were wounded. There appeared to be no correlation of grazer density with F. distichus survivorship. Thalli at the site with few herbivores tended to reproduce earlier and at a larger size than did those at the other two sites. In all three areas, only thalli that had received little damage from herbivores became reproductive. By lowering growth rates and delaying reproduction in F. distichus, grazing by littorine snails can potentially cause variation in reproductive output among individual thalli. |
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Keywords: | Fucus growth, herbivory Littorina Phaeophyta population dynamics reproduction wounding. |
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