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Download The Intertidal Zone Zones Rocky Intertidal Rocky shores
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Zones The Intertidal Zone • Supralittoral: area just above high water mark, only submerged during storms; otherwise ocean spray • Littoral: intertidal zone between low and high water marks • Sublittoral: subtidal zone below low water mark, permanently submerged; extends down to the continental shelf break (~200 m) • Below the shelf break, benthic habitats are classified into bathyal, abyssal, and hadal zones; all are aphotic. • The abyssal zone is the largest benthic area (75%): temperature 4°C, high hydrostatic pressure, little food Rocky Intertidal • Harsh environment: loss of water at low tide; physical forces of waves; variation in temperature; UV radiation; ice formation; variation in salinity (rain exposure) • Adaptation to life between water and air: > > > > > Hard shells and solid attachment against wave action High temperature and water-loss tolerance (60-90% of water in some algae) Retreat into shells and housings at low tide to minimize water loss and exposure to grazers Synchronized spawning Cluster formation Rocky shores • Most organisms live on the surface (epifauna) • Zonation of rocky shores: > > > > Spray zone (rarely covered by water) High tide zone Middle tide zone Low tide zone (rarely exposed) • Upper zones have mostly shelled organisms • Lower zones have many soft-bodied organisms and algae 1 INTERTIDAL ADAPTATIONS Rocky shores: Intertidal zonation and organisms Vertical Zonation • Highest zones > > > > black lichen on highest zone periwinkle zone (gastropods) barnacle-dominated zone zone dominated by different spp. (i.e. mussels in N. America) • Zone correlates with tidal levels (i.e. upper limit of seaweed) • Laminaria - extreme low water in sheltered areas Causes of Zonation Zonation Maintenance of zone: 1) selective larval settlement 2) behavioral patterns 1. 2. 3. 4. Physiological tolerance Larval and adult preference Competition Predation 3) physical tolerance of org. 4) wave action and tidal range 8 wave splash can extend zones 5) intraintra- and interspecies competition 6) predation and algal grazing that is tidal range dependent 2 Pioneering Experimental Study by Joseph Connell Desiccation Graphical representation of Connell’s results Chthamalus • Chthamalus stellatus (high intertidal) Semibalanus balanoides (low intertidal) • Used experimental manipulations • Thinned density of potential competitors • Excluded potential predators with cages MHW spring MHW neap tha Ch • n s t io nu eti ala mp b i Co m Se us la n ba mi Se s lu ma • Rocky intertidal of Scotland: two barnacle species Mean tide W av e Sh Pr ed oc at k io n Physical factors Interspecific effects MLW neap Adult density MLW spring Settlement of cyprids Intertidal Paradigm Chthamalus MHW neap Desiccation Chthamalus s ion u n etit ala mp mib Co Se s nu ala mib Se Mean tide s alu am MHW neap th Ch MHW spring Mean tide W av Pr ed at io e Sh o n s t io nu eti ala mp b i Co m Se us la n ba mi Se s lu ma MHW spring tha Ch • Upper limits determined by physical stress • Lower limits determined by ecological factors, e.g. competition and predation Desiccation W av e Sh Pr ed oc at k io n Physical factors Interspecific effects ck n Physical factors MLW neap MLW neap Adult density MLW spring Interspecific effects Adult density MLW spring Settlement of cyprids Settlement of cyprids 3 ISSUE: Temperature Stress and Desiccation • Seaweeds and mussel beds retain moisture and harbor invertebrates • In winter Ilyanassa obsoleta moves to subtidal regions to avoid danger of freezing • Different fauna live on light and dark surfaces (volcanic vs. sandstones and limestones) ISSUE: Water Loss • Barnacles, mussels, limpets - can seal off loss more effectively than soft-bodied animals - polychaetes, anemones, ascidians • Ulva - can dominate shallow mud flats in winter but dies off in summer • Ascophyllum nodosum, Fucus vesiculosus very tolerant - when >5% water loss photosynthesis is affected Effects of displacement ISSUE: Dissolved Oxygen and Gas Exchange • Mytilus calif. - under moist conditions • Guekensia demissus - takes air in at low tide • Anaerobic metabolism when oxygen reserve is depleted • Also respiratory pigments • Hemoglobin, hemocyanin, chlorocruorin - many polychaetes have these compounds. • Reduced feeding times > time spent feeding reduced in upper zone; these animals tend to be smaller • Wave action > > > > Spisula solidissima Emerita Donax denticulatus Ensis 4 Larval Biology and Supply-side Ecology Larval settlement behavior in water column R. K. Grosberg Ecology 1982 Maybe supply varies with depth? • Larval behavior in water column • Larval behavior at settlement Swimming behavior in the coral Agaricia humilis Zonation with Depth on St. Croix Site 1 Site 2 Depth (meters) Raimondi and Morse. 2000. Ecology Reef Crest 1.5 3.0 6.0 9.0 Favia fragum 0 1 2 Abundance (# 3 4 5 corals/m2) D. B. Carlon. 2002. J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol. 5 Zonation and Larval Behavior Zonation with Depth Do larvae select substrata from different depths? Do larvae select substrata from different depths? Design • Larval settlement on coral rubble in lab • Rubble collected from 3 depths x 2 sites • Larvae from shallow-water parents 80 Site 1 Site 2 % Settlement 70 60 50 a Favia fragum a 40 30 20 b 10 0 Back reef 1.5 m Fore reef 3 m Fore reef 10 m Origin of Substrata Larval Biology and Supply-side Ecology ISSUE: Territoriality Supply can vary with depth • Larval behavior in water column (barnacles and corals) • Larval behavior at settlement (corals) • Upper and lower limits can be set by supply • many limpets remain at one spot at time of low tide and graze on algae at high in this vicinity • Scars develop on substrate > Pacific Owl Limpet - Lottia gigantea - defends space 6 ISSUE: Competition ISSUE: Competition • Acorn barnacle Chthamatus stellatus and Balanus balanoides (better competition in lower zone) Barnacle vs. barnacle (Connell, 1961) > > > Transplanted rocks with newly settled C. stell. to all levels in the intertidal Some rocks were caged to avoid predation by Thais lapillus C. stell. - survivorship was greater in upper but not so in lower (fig. 16-1) Algae vs. algae > > • Mussel vs. Algae Caging Exp. (Lubchenco, 1980) • In headlands wave exposed coasts removal of Asterias forbesi and vulgaris and T. lapillus results in Mytilus domination. > ISSUE: Competition Mussel vs. mussel (Hager, 1968, 1970, 1972) • M. edulis vs. M. calif. • M. edulis - more mobile, active, in bays • M calif. - thick shell, on wave-exposed coast Chondrus crispus - lower - resistant to grazing Gastropods dessication restricts upper F. vesiculosus restricted by gastropods in lower Lubchenco and Menge, 1978 ISSUE: Competition • Mussel - Barnacle • Paine, 1966 - Mukkan Bay (outer Wash. coast) > > > removed individuals of Pisaster ochraceus capable of devastating both mussel and barnacle following removal - 60-80% of space occupied by barnacle next year in fall by summer, Mytilus competition dominant and Mitella spp. 7 Predation and Species Interactions • Predators reduce prey density • Prey species compete • Conclude: predation may promote coexistence of competing prey species Predation intensity varies depending on the distribution of refuges A rocky shore in the U.K. At the time of low tide on hot dry days, the gastropod Nucella lapillus retreats into the crack where it is moist and cool. Note the areas cleared of mussels adjacent to the cracks. Field Experiments of Robert Paine • Rocky shores of outer coast of Washington State • Principle predator - starfish Pisaster ochraceus • Pisaster preys on a wide variety of sessile prey species, including barnacles, mussels, brachiopods, gastropods Dense population of the barnacle Semibalanus balanoides Pacific coast starfish Pisaster ochraceus, flipped over Left: eating a mussel, Right: eating barnacles 8 Paine Experiment: Results • Removal of Pisaster ochraceus • Successful settlement of recruits of mussel Mytilus californianus Keystone Paradigm • Predators increase species diversity by reducing the effects of competitive dominants • Other species greatly reduced in abundance, Mytilus californianus became dominant • Conclusion: Pisaster ochraceus is a keystone species, a species whose presence has strong effects on community organization mediated by factors such as competition and predation Complications with the keystone paradigm Larval supply of competitive dominants fluctuates Because….. 1. Current structure changes and prevents larvae from returning to shore 2. Predation in subtidal habitats reduces the abundance of larvae returning to shore 3. Changes in productivity decrease survivorship of feeding larvae (few examples). Disturbance and Community Structure • Disturbances are physical events that influence the distribution and abundance of organisms • Disturbances may reduce abundance of competing species • Therefore, disturbance may allow coexistence of competitively inferior species, or may allow colonization of species adapted to disturbance 9 Postelsia palmaeformis : the seapalm Spatial Scale of Disturbance is Crucial in Subsequent Colonization events • A very small scale disturbance in a mussel bed might just result in the mussels moving and sealing off the opened patch • Larger patches might be colonized by other species and the patch might last many months or even indefinitely • Therefore, spatial scale of disturbance might affect the spatial pattern of dominance of species, creating a mosaic of long-lived patches • Invades rocks that have been severely disturbed by storms • Spores are released and travel just a few cm from the plant • Permits local spread of a colonizing individual Sediment-covered shores California mussels California mussels California mussels • Most organisms burrow into the sediment (infauna) • Sediment-covered shores include: Small > Newly Opened Patch California mussels California mussels Bay Mussels And Seaweeds Large California mussels California mussels California mussels > > Beaches Salt marshes Mud flats California mussels Disturbance and spatial scale: events following the opening of a small and large patch in a Pacific coast mussel bed 10 Soft-Sediment Redox Potential Discontinuity (RDP) Sediment-covered shores: Intertidal zonation and organisms Sediment surface 0 5 10 mg/l Light brown 15 oxidized layer O2 RPD Reduced black layer H2S 0 Microbial communities and the RPD Photosynthetic bacteria and algae (cyanobacteria and diatoms) Aerobic bacteria (use oxygen to break down organic substrates) RPD RPD Fermenting bacteria (break down organic cpds. --> alcohols,fatty acids) 100 200 Gray layer 300 400 mg/l Macrobenthos: Deposit Feeders Feed upon sediment, within the sediment or at sediment surface 1. Head-down deposit feeders feed within the sediment at depth, usually on fine particles, defecate at surface 2. Surface browsers often feed on surface microorganisms such as diatoms Sulfate reducing bacteria (reduce SO4 to H2S) Methanogenic bacteria (break down organic cpds. --> methane) 11 Deposit Feeders Deposit feeders: potential food sources • Microbial communities • Particulate Organic Material (POM) Surface tentacle feeding polychaete Tentacle feeding bivalve Deep feeding polychaete Surface feeding amphipod Surface siphonate feeding bivalve Deep feeding polychaete Microbial Stripping Hypothesis • Macrobenthos cannot digest and assimilate POM as readily as the microbial communities living on the surfaces of POM. POM broken down in three ways • Fragmentation- physical disturbance or grazers breaks material down • Leaching- loss of DOM from POM • Microbial decay- Surface bound microbes colonize, enrich in nitrogen (Fungi) and take up POM (Heterotrophic bacteria) 12 Habitat and food sources • Sand flats- microbial communities • Salt marshes and seaweed communities- POM • Seaweed POM is easier to digest and assimilate Burrowing by deposit feeders affect sediment structure Energetic arguments against strict microbe diets • Salt marshes- Not enough microbes to support all the macrobenthos • POM utilized directly? • External sources of food? Active Suspension Feeders • Fecal pellets increase grain size • Head down feeders may selectively feed on small grained sediments and transport them to the surface Bivalve, x-section Polychaete Serpula Barnacle 13 Hard Bottom Suspension Feeders Hard Bottom Suspension Feeders Hard Bottom Suspension Feeders Hard Bottom Suspension Feeders 14 Passive Suspension Feeding: Net Hypothesis Hard Bottom Suspension Feeders • • • • How can passive suspension feeding work? Requires small mesh size Flow must be low Reynolds numbers are therefore low Net or paddle? How can passive suspension feeding work? • Sieving- limits capture to particles > distance between feeding structures (mesh size) • Direct interception • Inertial impaction- requires higher Reynolds numbers • Motile particle deposition • Gravitation deposition- requires higher Reynolds numbers Motile particle deposition Direct interception Sieving Inertial impaction = fiber Gravitational deposition 15