Journal article

Contrasting effects of variable species recruitment on marine sessile communities

MA Sams, MJ Keough

Ecology | Published : 2012

Abstract

The species composition, density, and frequency of recruitment into any given habitat are highly variable in most biological systems that rely on dispersive propagules (larvae, seeds, spores, etc.). There are few direct experimental studies of how recruitment variation between single species influences the composition and assembly of whole communities in many of these systems. We manipulated recruitment of a variety of single taxa and followed their effects on the subsequent development of hard-substrate communities of sessile animals living in temperate marine waters. The effects of recruitment on communities were complex. Patterns of recruitment of individual species influenced community s..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Funding Acknowledgements

We thank Paul Carnell and Alexis Howard for their assistance with field work and sampling, Pete Raimondi for facilitating experiments in Santa Cruz, Parks Victoria and Santa Cruz Harbor for providing access to study sites, and Richard Osman and John Witman for helpful comments on the Ph.D. thesis chapter that generated this manuscript. This research was funded by a Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment obtained by M. A. Sams and an ARC to M. J. Keough.