TY - JOUR
T1 - Hormosira banksii (Phaeophyceae)
T2 - a tough survivor in the harsh conditions of high intertidal pools in southeast Australia
AU - Kain (Jones), Joanna M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 British Phycological Society.
PY - 2015/10/2
Y1 - 2015/10/2
N2 - Hormosira banksii, the most successful intertidal fucoid in the southern hemisphere, usually inhabits only the lower shore. On Kainga Reef, at 36°S on the New South Wales coast, it is one of only two macroalgae in most of the pools on a platform above xthe lowest high water; 29 pools in the middle of the platform were monitored photographically for 12 years. Recruitment was not seasonal. It took about 5–8 months for germlings to become visible, when they consisted of about 3 vesicles. The growth rate of germlings was between linear and exponential. Individuals could become fertile when they were 11–14 months old. Adult frond growth rate in the mid-platform pools, measured in situ, was highest in autumn but similar in the other seasons. In summer, however, in pools at the edge of the reef, often flushed by waves, the growth rate was as fast in summer as in autumn, either because of better provision of scarce nutrients or because of less inhibition by high temperature. Mortality, both of individuals and of fronds, was highest in the summer when pool isolation for one or more tidal cycles, caused by the coincidence of low high tide levels and a calm sea, was more common. Hormosira could tolerate full summer sunlight, water temperatures of up to 40°C, 140 psu (four times the strength of seawater) but not dehydration. Dehydration caused inter-annual variation in cover and in the total number of plants present, but with no overall trend over 12 years. Sand cover and rotting cast weed could also cause mortality. Survivorship was Slobodkin’s Type IV, with few plants reaching 4 years but high longevity after that, due to the establishment of a holdfast which could regenerate new fronds. Compared with other fucoids, growth was slow. The lifestyle resembles that of Ascophyllum nodosum.
AB - Hormosira banksii, the most successful intertidal fucoid in the southern hemisphere, usually inhabits only the lower shore. On Kainga Reef, at 36°S on the New South Wales coast, it is one of only two macroalgae in most of the pools on a platform above xthe lowest high water; 29 pools in the middle of the platform were monitored photographically for 12 years. Recruitment was not seasonal. It took about 5–8 months for germlings to become visible, when they consisted of about 3 vesicles. The growth rate of germlings was between linear and exponential. Individuals could become fertile when they were 11–14 months old. Adult frond growth rate in the mid-platform pools, measured in situ, was highest in autumn but similar in the other seasons. In summer, however, in pools at the edge of the reef, often flushed by waves, the growth rate was as fast in summer as in autumn, either because of better provision of scarce nutrients or because of less inhibition by high temperature. Mortality, both of individuals and of fronds, was highest in the summer when pool isolation for one or more tidal cycles, caused by the coincidence of low high tide levels and a calm sea, was more common. Hormosira could tolerate full summer sunlight, water temperatures of up to 40°C, 140 psu (four times the strength of seawater) but not dehydration. Dehydration caused inter-annual variation in cover and in the total number of plants present, but with no overall trend over 12 years. Sand cover and rotting cast weed could also cause mortality. Survivorship was Slobodkin’s Type IV, with few plants reaching 4 years but high longevity after that, due to the establishment of a holdfast which could regenerate new fronds. Compared with other fucoids, growth was slow. The lifestyle resembles that of Ascophyllum nodosum.
KW - dehydration
KW - growth rate
KW - high temperature, Hormosira banksii
KW - hypersalinity
KW - intertidal rockpools
KW - mortality
KW - recruitment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84945422624&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/09670262.2015.1075594
DO - 10.1080/09670262.2015.1075594
M3 - Article
SN - 0967-0262
VL - 50
SP - 408
EP - 421
JO - European Journal of Phycology
JF - European Journal of Phycology
IS - 4
ER -