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EFFECTS OF ISLAND GROUPS,DEPTH, AND EXPOSURE TO OCEAN WAVES ON SUBTIDAL MACROALGAL ASSEMBLAGES IN THE RECHERCHE ARCHIPELAGO,WESTERN AUSTRALIA1
Authors:Nisse A Goldberg  Gary A Kendrick
Abstract:Temperate Australia has a speciose highly endemic algal flora. This study explored the influence of geographical isolation between islands, depth and exposure to ocean swells on the diversity of macroalgae in the Recherche Archipelago (Western Australia). Macroalgae were harvested (0.25‐m2 quadrats) from sites at two exposures (sheltered and exposed to wave energy), three depths (<10, 10–20, and 21–28 m), and two island groups (three islands within Esperance Bay and three islands outside the bay). A total of 220 species were collected. Species richness and biomass were significantly different at the smallest spatial scale (0.25 m2), and density of overstory species decreased with depth. Results from analysis of similarity tests suggested that macroalgal assemblages differed with depth, exposure and to a lesser extent with island group. Assemblage differences were often associated with particular overstory or understory taxa and not the entire assemblage composition. Average species richness·0.25 m?2 ranged from 13 to 29 species, typically with a few species contributing more than 50% of average biomass. Species richness was maintained by species turnover at the 0.25‐m2 spatial scale. Our results suggest that richness in temperate Australia is maintained by turnover of broadly distributed species. More dominant species in assemblages were associated with differences in depth and exposure to ocean swells. Our findings support the hypothesis of a geographical transition of dominant species from kelp‐dominated in the west to a fucalean‐dominated assemblage in the Recherche Archipelago and east of the Great Australian Bight.
Keywords:depth  exposure  island groups  southwestern Australia  subtidal algal assemblages
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