Journal article
The role of asteroid predators in the organization of a sessile community on pier pilings
MJ Keough, AJ Butler
Marine Biology | SPRINGER HEIDELBERG | Published : 1979
DOI: 10.1007/BF00555196
Abstract
The diets of 4 species of asteroids were observed for `9 months on the piles of a pier at Rapid Bay, South Australia. Coscinasterias calamaria (Gray) fed on molluscs, crustaceans and moribund items. Patiriella brevispina H.L. Clark fed on compound ascidians, sponges and moribund items. Tosia australis Gray and Petricia vernicina (Lamarck) ate mainly sponges, bryozoans and compound ascidians. A short-term (6 months) caging experiment showed that 5 common species of sessile animals-3 sponges and 2 compound ascidians-were significantly reduced by seastar predation. Nevertheless, the amount eaten, considered with seastar densities and distributions, indicates that the seastars are unimportant in..
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