Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-fv566 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-17T18:43:35.776Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Patterns of abundance and distribution of species in intertidal rock pools

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

K. L. Astles
Affiliation:
School of Biological Sciences, Zoology Building, A08, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia

Extract

Rock pools are unique and complex habitats in intertidal areas. Quantitative studies of assemblages in pools are few. Abundances and distributions of species in pools on a rock platform near Sydney (Australia) were sampled for two years. Pools of four different depths (5, 15, 30 and 40 cm deep) and up to four strata within each pool (0–5, 5–15, 15–30 and 30–40 cm, from the top of the pool) were sampled, replicated at four sites. The abundances and distributions of most species of plants and animals in pools did not differ between strata nor at different depths in the pools. Abundances of only three species, the encrusting alga, Hildenbrandia prototypus Nardo, the trochid snail, Austrocochlea constricta (Lamarck) and the limpet, Cellana tramoserica (Sowerby) varied significantly between strata and depths. In contrast to other studies on rock pools, most species showed no significant temporal variations in mean abundances in the sites sampled. Significantly large, spatial and temporal, random fluctuations did, however, occur in abundances in individual pools. The consistency of abundances at larger spatial scales indicated that disturbance in these habitats may not be an important structuring process. The large variation between pools does, however, suggest that the history of each pool may have a more significant role in the character of its assemblage. Some implications of small-scale variability are discussed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Connell, J. H. & Sousa, W. P., 1983. On the evidence needed to judge ecological stability or persistence. American Naturalist, 121, 789824.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dethier, M. N., 1982. Pattern and process in tidepool algae: factors influencing seasonality and distribution. Botanica Marina, 25, 5566.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dethier, M. N., 1984. Disturbance and recovery in intertidal pools: maintenance of mosaic patterns. Ecological Monographs, 54, 99118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Femino, R. J. & Mathieson, A. C., 1980. Investigations of New England marine algae. IV. The ecology and seasonal succession of tide pool algae at Bald Head Cliff, York, Maine, USA. Botanica Marina, 23, 319332.Google Scholar
Goss-Custard, S., Jones, J., Kitching, J. A. & Norton, T. A., 1979. Tide pools of Carrigathorna and Barloge Creek. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London (B), 287, 144.Google Scholar
Gustavsson, U., 1972. A proposal for the classification of marine rock pools on the Swedish west coast. Botanica Marina, 15, 210214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurlbert, S. H., 1984. Pseudoreplication and the design of ecological field experiments. Ecological Monographs, 54, 187211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, D. S. & Skutch, A. F., 1928. Littoral vegetation on a headland of Mt Desert Island, Maine. II. Tide-pools and the environment and classification of submersible plant communities. Ecology, 9, 307336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kay, A. M. & Keough, M. J., 1981. Occupation of patches in the epifaunal communities on pier pilings and the bivalve Pinna bicolor at Edithburgh, South Australia. Oecologia, 48, 123130.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Keough, M. J., 1984. Dynamics of the epifauna of the bivalve Pinna bicolor: interactions among recruitment, predation, and competition. Ecology, 65, 677688.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kooistra, W. H. C. F., Joosten, A. M. T. & Hoek, C. Van Den, 1989. Zonation patterns in intertidal pools and their possible causes: a multivariate approach. Botanica Marina, 32, 926.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lubchenco, J., 1978. Plant species diversity in a marine intertidal community: importance of herbivore food preference and algal competitive abilities. American Naturalist, 112, 2339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGuinness, K. A., 1987. Disturbance and organisms on boulders. I. Patterns in the environment and the community. Oecologia, 71, 409419.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sousa, W. P., 1984. Intertidal mosaics: patch size, propagule availability, and spatially variable patterns of succession. Ecology, 65, 19181935.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sutherland, J. P., 1974. Multiple stable points in natural communities. American Naturalist, 108, 859873.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sutherland, J. P., 1981. The fouling community at Beaufort, North Carolina: a study in stability. American Naturalist, 118, 499519.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sze, P., 1980. Aspects of the ecology of macrophytic algae in high rockpools at the Isles of Shoals (USA). Botanica Marina, 23, 313318.Google Scholar
Underwood, A. J., 1978. The detection of non-random patterns of distribution of species along a gradient. Oecologia, 36, 317326.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Underwood, A. J., 1981. Techniques of analysis of variance in experimental marine biology and ecology. Oceanography and Marine Biology. Annual Review. London, 19, 513605.Google Scholar
Underwood, A. J., 1986. What is a community? In Patterns and processes in the history of life (ed. Raup, D. M. and Jablonski, D.), pp. 351367. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Underwood, A. J., 1989. The analysis of stress in natural populations. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 37, 5178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Underwood, A. J., 1992. Beyond BACI: the detection of environmental impact on populations in the real, but variable world. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 161, 145178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Underwood, A. J., 1993. The mechanics of spatially replicated sampling programmes to detect environmental impacts in a variable world. Australian journal of Ecology, 18, 99116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Underwood, A. J. & Jernakoff, P., 1984. The effects of tidal height, wave-exposure, seasonality and rock-pools on grazing and the distribution of intertidal macroalgae in New South Wales. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 75, 7196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winer, B. J., 1971. Statistical principles in experimental design. New York: McGraw Hill.Google Scholar
Wolfe, J. M. & Harlin, M. M., 1988a. Tidepools in southern Rhode Island, USA. I. Distribution and seasonality of macroalgae. Botanica Marina, 31, 525536.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolfe, J. M. & Harlin, M. M., 1988b. Tidepools in southern Rhode Island, USA. II. Species diversity and similarity analysis of macroalgal communities. Botanica Marina, 31, 537546.CrossRefGoogle Scholar