Spatial variation in recruitment of native and invasive sessile species onto oyster reefs in a temperate soft-bottom lagoon

Although spatial variability in recruitment is a strong force structuring many marine communities, relatively few data exist on recruitment variability in sessile oyster reef communities. In a soft-bottom lagoon in Virginia, we tested if recruitment differed among three reefs situated across a mainl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Estuarine, coastal and shelf science coastal and shelf science, 2007-03, Vol.72 (1), p.89-101
Hauptverfasser: Thomsen, M.S., Silliman, B.R., McGlathery, K.J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although spatial variability in recruitment is a strong force structuring many marine communities, relatively few data exist on recruitment variability in sessile oyster reef communities. In a soft-bottom lagoon in Virginia, we tested if recruitment differed among three reefs situated across a mainland-lagoon-barrier-island transect and among elevations (>90–80, >80–70, >70–55 and >55–20 cm below MSL) on the lagoon reef. The most abundant taxa (the invasive algae Gracilaria vermiculophylla and Codium fragile and the indigenous oyster Crassostrea virginica and algae Ulva curvata) had highest recruitment at the lagoon reef, where propagule supply was likely highest. The mainland reef had lowest algal richness (1.4–3.1 panel −1) and abundances (70–55 and >80–70 cm respectively (probably limited upward by desiccation), U. curvata down to >70–55 cm (probably limited downward by grazing or competition), whereas C. virginica recruited at all elevations. Animal richness was highest at the two lowest elevations (2.0–2.5 vs. 1.1–1.8 panel −1), but there was no effect of elevation on algae (3–6 panel −1) because of species substitutions between elevation levels. Thus, as in rocky intertidal systems, spatial variability in recruitment is important for community structure on oyster reefs, and if biodiversity is considered an important reef conservation goal, managers should focus conservation and restoration on locations and elevations that support successful recruitment and survival of many different species.
ISSN:0272-7714
1096-0015
DOI:10.1016/j.ecss.2006.10.004