Spatiotemporal variability in population demography and morphology of the habitat-forming macroalga Saccorhiza polyschides in the Western English Channel
Spatiotemporal variability in population demography and morphology of the habitat-forming macroalga Saccorhiza polyschides in the Western English Channel
Background and aims: large brown macroalgae serve as foundation organisms along temperate and polar coastlines, providing a range of ecosystem services. Saccorhiza polyschides is a warm-temperate kelp-like species found in the northeast Atlantic, which is suggested to have proliferated in recent decades across the southern UK, possibly in response to increasing temperatures, physical disturbance and reduced competition. However, little is known about S. polyschides with regard to ecological functioning and population dynamics across its geographical range. Here we examined the population demography of S. polyschides populations in southwest UK, located within the species’ range centre, to address a regional knowledge gap and to provide a baseline against which to detect future changes.
Methods: intertidal surveys were conducted during spring low tides at three sites along a gradient of wave exposure in Plymouth Sound (Western English Channel) over a period of 15 months. Density, cover, age, biomass and morphology of S. polyschides were quantified. Additionally, less frequent sampling of shallow subtidal reefs was conducted to compare intertidal and subtidal populations.
Key results: we recorded pronounced seasonality, with fairly consistent demographic patterns across sites and depths. By late summer, S. polyschides was a dominant habitat-former on both intertidal and subtidal reefs, with maximum standing stock exceeding 13 000 g wet weight m−2.
Conclusions: Saccorhiza polyschides is a conspicuous and abundant member of rocky reef assemblages in the region, providing complex and abundant biogenic habitat for associated organisms and high rates of primary productivity. However, its short-lived pseudo-annual life strategy is in stark contrast to dominant long-lived perennial laminarian kelps. As such, any replacement or reconfiguration of habitat-forming macroalgae due to ocean warming will probably have implications for local biodiversity and community composition. More broadly, our study demonstrates the importance of high-resolution cross-habitat surveys to generate robust baselines of kelp population demography, against which the ecological impacts of climate change and other stressors can be reliably detected.
Saccorhiza polyschides, Furbelows, kelp, marine forests, seaweeds, macroalgae, foundation species, habitat-former, temperate rocky reefs, seasonality, wave exposure, ocean warming
117-130
Salland, Nora
08175d12-8524-46f0-aef0-98c613b6a23d
Wilding, Catherine
d2dd0b57-2e68-4ad5-b117-a2ab80c37f78
Jensen, Antony
ff1cabd2-e6fa-4e34-9a39-5097e2bc5f85
Smale, Dan A.
9be48b19-ad5f-4f40-87c8-e0bfa799584f
29 November 2023
Salland, Nora
08175d12-8524-46f0-aef0-98c613b6a23d
Wilding, Catherine
d2dd0b57-2e68-4ad5-b117-a2ab80c37f78
Jensen, Antony
ff1cabd2-e6fa-4e34-9a39-5097e2bc5f85
Smale, Dan A.
9be48b19-ad5f-4f40-87c8-e0bfa799584f
Salland, Nora, Wilding, Catherine, Jensen, Antony and Smale, Dan A.
(2023)
Spatiotemporal variability in population demography and morphology of the habitat-forming macroalga Saccorhiza polyschides in the Western English Channel.
Annals of Botany, 133 (1), .
(doi:10.1093/aob/mcad181).
Record type:
Special issue
Abstract
Background and aims: large brown macroalgae serve as foundation organisms along temperate and polar coastlines, providing a range of ecosystem services. Saccorhiza polyschides is a warm-temperate kelp-like species found in the northeast Atlantic, which is suggested to have proliferated in recent decades across the southern UK, possibly in response to increasing temperatures, physical disturbance and reduced competition. However, little is known about S. polyschides with regard to ecological functioning and population dynamics across its geographical range. Here we examined the population demography of S. polyschides populations in southwest UK, located within the species’ range centre, to address a regional knowledge gap and to provide a baseline against which to detect future changes.
Methods: intertidal surveys were conducted during spring low tides at three sites along a gradient of wave exposure in Plymouth Sound (Western English Channel) over a period of 15 months. Density, cover, age, biomass and morphology of S. polyschides were quantified. Additionally, less frequent sampling of shallow subtidal reefs was conducted to compare intertidal and subtidal populations.
Key results: we recorded pronounced seasonality, with fairly consistent demographic patterns across sites and depths. By late summer, S. polyschides was a dominant habitat-former on both intertidal and subtidal reefs, with maximum standing stock exceeding 13 000 g wet weight m−2.
Conclusions: Saccorhiza polyschides is a conspicuous and abundant member of rocky reef assemblages in the region, providing complex and abundant biogenic habitat for associated organisms and high rates of primary productivity. However, its short-lived pseudo-annual life strategy is in stark contrast to dominant long-lived perennial laminarian kelps. As such, any replacement or reconfiguration of habitat-forming macroalgae due to ocean warming will probably have implications for local biodiversity and community composition. More broadly, our study demonstrates the importance of high-resolution cross-habitat surveys to generate robust baselines of kelp population demography, against which the ecological impacts of climate change and other stressors can be reliably detected.
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mcad181
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Accepted/In Press date: 13 November 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 November 2023
Published date: 29 November 2023
Keywords:
Saccorhiza polyschides, Furbelows, kelp, marine forests, seaweeds, macroalgae, foundation species, habitat-former, temperate rocky reefs, seasonality, wave exposure, ocean warming
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 489338
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489338
ISSN: 0305-7364
PURE UUID: 8d6129bb-4f1a-4bbf-9c4f-b4d727317c63
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Date deposited: 22 Apr 2024 16:32
Last modified: 23 Apr 2024 01:31
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Author:
Catherine Wilding
Author:
Dan A. Smale
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