Effects of herbivory and the season of disturbance on algal succession in a tropical intertidal shore, Phuket, Thailand

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Abstract

The effects of herbivory and the season of disturbance on species composition and algal succession were experimentally tested at a tropical intertidal shore, Phuket Island, Thailand. Dead coral patches were cleared of all organisms during both the dry and rainy seasons in order to study the effects of season on algal succession and cages were set up to exclude fish herbivory. Algal succession in this intertidal habitat showed a simple pattern and took a year from the early Ulva paradoxa C. Agardh stage to the late Polysiphonia sphaerocarpa Børgesen stage. The abundance of algae during succession was under the influence of seasonal change. U. paradoxa reproduced and recruited throughout the year. Caging effects did not apparently influence algal abundance, perhaps because resident herbivorous damselfishes excluded other herbivores from their territories and maintained their algal " farms" Unexpectedly, the percent cover of Ulva in the caged plots was lower than in uncaged plots. This pattern may indicate that caging excluded damselfishes only, but allowed small herbivores that consumed substantial amounts of soft filamentous algae in the cages.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)88-96
Number of pages9
JournalPhycological Research
Volume58
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2010

Keywords

  • Algal succession
  • Cage experiment
  • Herbivory
  • Season of disturbance

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