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Crab herbivory regulates re‐colonization of disturbed patches in a southwestern Atlantic salt marsh
Authors:Pedro Daleo  Juan Alberti  Oscar Iribarne
Institution:Depto de Biología (FCEyN), Univ. Nacional de Mar del Plata, CC 573 Correo Central B7600WAG, Mar del Plata, Argentina and: Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Argentina
Abstract:Recent work exploring the effects of physical stress and herbivory on secondary succession in estuarine plant communities agrees with basic stress models and reveal that herbivory is an important force in brackish and oligohaline marshes but negligible in physically stressful salt marshes. In these systems, herbivores are terrestrial, and thus negatively affected by the same stressful factors that affect marsh plants (i.e. frequent flooding or high salinities). We evaluated the effects of a marine herbivore (i.e. the crab Neohelice granulata) on plant secondary succession in a southwestern Atlantic salt marsh. Field surveys revealed that disturbance‐generated bare patches have harsh physical conditions and that their edges suffer higher herbivore pressure compared to the marsh matrix. A factorial experiment demonstrated that asexual expansion of the surrounding plants is the only possible mechanism to re‐colonize disturbed patches and that crab exclusion can increase this colonization rate by more than 30 times. Our results show that even in highly stressful environments, herbivores strongly impact marsh structure by regulating patch recovery. The synergism of physical stress and herbivory may make plant succession an extremely slow process and lead to the prevalence of bare areas.
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