Positive interactions are increasingly recognised to be important as community structure
processes. Bertness and Callaway's model predicts positive interactions to be important under high
consumer pressure or high environmental stress. Associational defences between organisms, when
palatable algae take advantage of living with less palatable ones, will be the dominant structuring
forces under high consumer pressure and low physical stress. Habitat ameliorations become more
important under harsh physical conditions and low consumer pressure. This model was tested at
Wembury Bay, Devon, Southwest England, using rockpools and emergent rock habitats distributed
over the vertical height of the shore to generate gradients of environmental stress.
Relationships between rockpool physico-chemical parameters and assemblage composition
were investigated across the shore. Highest rockpool communities on the shore experienced the
harshest environmental stress. Consumer pressure measured in rockpools was twice that recorded
on emergent rock owing to high tide limpet movements from the surroundings into the pool rather
than herbivore densities. Over these gradients, experimental plots were maintained at natural and
reduced grazer density to control consumer pressure. Species interactions during succession were
examined. Experimental plots distributed at three shore heights (high, mid, low) were scraped
in both habitats to initiate succession and were then sampled regularly over a 2 year period.
Species susceptibility to grazing drove different trajectories of succession under high and low
consumer pressure suggesting that palatability influences species interactions. Physical stress
affected species recruitment and development of the successional sequence in both habitats and
over the intertidal gradient. Selective removal of early ephemeral and later perennial colonising
algal species provided some evidence of positive interactions under both elevated levels of physical
stress and high consumer pressure. These results are discussed in the context of the Bertness and
Callaway model with which they are consistent and other models of succession.
Date of Award | 2007 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Awarding Institution | |
---|
SPECIES INTERACTIONS DURING SUCCESSION IN ROCKPOOLS: ROLE OF HERBIVORES AND PHYSICAL FACTORS
NOEL, L. M. J. (Author). 2007
Student thesis: PhD