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Effects of herbivore grazing on the physiognomy of the coralline alga <i>Spongites yendoi</i> and on associated competitive interactions


GW Maneveldt
DW Keats

Abstract

The territorial gardening limpet Scutellastra cochlear occurs along the south and southern west coasts of South Africa, whereas one of its primary food items, the encrusting coralline alga Spongites yendoi, extends much farther north along the West Coast. A combined analysis of geographic variation in limpet grazing frequency and a limpet-manipulation experiment was used to study the interaction between the limpet and its coralline food. The coralline comprised most (c. 85%) of the limpet\'s diet whereas fleshy algae from the limpet\'s garden comprised c. 7%. Grazing caused the thallus of the coralline to be thin and smooth; in the absence of herbivory, or under low grazing frequencies, the crust became thick and highly protuberant. Grazing weakened the coralline\'s interference (overgrowth) competitive ability and also reduced its fecundity. In spite of these two apparently negative impacts, the intimate herbivore–coralline association between S. cochlear and S. yendoi showed characteristics of a facultative mutualism. Grazing by S. cochlear reduces the coralline\'s thallus thickness and consequently increased its lateral margin extension rate. Thinner forms of the coralline grew five times faster than thicker forms. An increased lateral growth results in the thinner form of the coralline being very abundant on the south and southern west coasts, occupying as much as 79% of the substratum in the lower eulittoral zone. Thinner forms of S. yendoi were also less burrowed by boring organisms and more strongly attached than thicker forms of the coralline. Grazing by S. cochlear has thus conferred the advantages of faster lateral growth (i.e. success at exploitation competition) and stronger attachment. The coralline and fleshy algae from the limpet\'s garden were equally high in organic content on a volume basis. This suggests that the crude food value per bite in the coralline and fleshy algae is comparable. This study has shown that incompletely overlapping distributions between strongly interacting species along a broad geographical gradient is not just a significant feature of the ecology of terrestrial, but also of marine ecosystems.

Keywords: competition; coralline; fecundity; growth; herbivory; morphology; Scutellastra cochlear; Spongites yendoi

African Journal of Marine Science 2008, 30(3): 581–593

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eISSN: 1814-2338
print ISSN: 1814-232X