Succession patterns of turf algal communities in a fringing coral reef ; Sukzessionsmuster von Algenmattengesellschaften in einem tropischen Saumriff

In scope of worldwide reef degradation due to anthropogenic environmental changes there is an urgent need to understand the different factors driving the processes within the coral reef ecosystem. Thus, the investigation of macroalgae becomes important, as they are observed to spread over the degraded reefs. Next to some conspicuous species, like Lobophora variegata and Dictyota spp., other smaller fialemntous algae, commonly known as algal turf, are observed. Algal turf has hardly been investigated to species level and has mainly been treated as functional group in many ecological studies. Th... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Fricke, Anna
Dokumenttyp: Dissertation
Erscheinungsdatum: 2011
Verlag/Hrsg.: Universität Bremen
Schlagwörter: Turf algae / Macroalgae / Cyanobacteria / Curacao / Lobophora variegata / benthic communities / settlement / epiphytes / 570 / 570 Life sciences / biology / ddc:570
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27395572
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://media.suub.uni-bremen.de/handle/elib/103

In scope of worldwide reef degradation due to anthropogenic environmental changes there is an urgent need to understand the different factors driving the processes within the coral reef ecosystem. Thus, the investigation of macroalgae becomes important, as they are observed to spread over the degraded reefs. Next to some conspicuous species, like Lobophora variegata and Dictyota spp., other smaller fialemntous algae, commonly known as algal turf, are observed. Algal turf has hardly been investigated to species level and has mainly been treated as functional group in many ecological studies. The need for studies at the species level is crucial, as certain species specific algal-coral interactions are reported to play an important role in the maintenance of the coral reefs. In order to increase the knowledge of turf algal communities in coral reefs ecosystems, the aim of the present study was to identify the species composition and to investigate the environmental factors potentially shaping the turf algal communities in a Carribean coral reef in the SW coast of Curacao. There were 101 different species identified, including 15 species of Chlorophyta, 10 species of Phaeophyceae, 61 species of Rhodophyta and 15 species of Cyanobacteria. To ease the investigation of these diverse assemblages, these species were grouped according to the lowest taxonomic level possible (preferably at genus level) for an adequate investigation under the dissection microscope (12 times magnification). Thus a total of 39 different taxa were distinguished. To understand the dynamics shaping these assemblages, the algal turf succession was followed over a period of 500 days, and the distribution of several turf algal species, growing on settlement tiles and as epiphytes on the dominant macrophyte L. variegata was investigated over a depth range from 2 to 40 m. Furthermore, in order to investigate the responses of turf algal communities towards changing environmental conditions, different successional stages were exposed in six ...