The grazer-algae interaction in the intertidal zone on New Zealand rocky shores

1979 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Raffaelli
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Peter Martin

<p>The brown algal genus Lessonia is distributed in the Southern Hemisphere where it can form dominant kelp beds on the exposed rocky shores of New Zealand, South America and Tasmania. Its disjunct distribution within the West Wind Drift contrasts with the view that it is a poor disperser. Apart from studies in Chile, where it is an economically important genus, little is known about Lessonia and in some areas even the number of species is unknown. Using different genetic markers I examined the phylogeny, phylogeography, and the connectivity of populations in Lessonia. Using the literature, species affiliations and nomenclatural problems have been investigated. Combining the sequences of three mitochondrial, one chloroplast and two nuclear markers, a supermatrix approach was used to investigate the phylogenetic relationship and the timing of speciation for all known Lessonia species. The Australasian Lessonia species form a clade within a paraphyletic grouping of South American species. Radiation in Lessonia occurred about 5 Mya at the beginning of the Pliocene and rapid radiation took place in Australasia 3.5 Mya. The data also revealed cryptic species within a L. variegata species complex. Further analysis within the Australasian clade, using mitochondrial (atp8-sp) and chloroplast (rbc-sp) markers and wider sampling (469 individuals from 57 sample sites) supported four cryptic species and revealed localized distribution for all Australasian lineages. Genetic breaks between Lessonia lineages corresponded well to known biogeographic regions and could be correlated to the geographic structure of New Zealand at the end of the Pliocene. The Cook Strait region was analysed more closely with newly developed microsatellite markers to test the influence of geographic breaks (Cook Strait and Palliser Bay) on the connectivity of populations. The results suggested that connectivity depends on the width of unsuitable habitat, and within inner Cook Strait it is facilitated by sometimes strong tidal flows that create turbulences and unique current patterns. The results implied that rafting is an important mean of dispersal. The study of the early literature on Lessonia supported the new lectotypification of L. flavicans but revealed that L. frutescens and possibly L. ovata (supported by images of rediscovered herbarium material) are synonymous to L. searlesiana and as the older epithets they should have priority. Suggestions have been made for the lectotypification of L. fuscescens and L. ovata. In general Lessonia shows non-overlapping distribution in Australasia but overlapping distribution in South America. Despite being a poor disperser, indicated by fine scale genetic structure, Lessonia is also able to connect populations over wide areas of unsuitable habitats.</p>


2011 ◽  
Vol 62 (10) ◽  
pp. 1221 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rahul Demello ◽  
Nicole E. Phillips

Recruitment influences populations and communities of marine organisms to varying degrees and across a range of spatial scales. We hypothesised that recruitment plays a role in maintaining different intertidal invertebrate assemblages between two nearby locations in New Zealand (Wellington Harbour and the south coast), long reported to have dramatically different communities (with greater cover of sessile invertebrates in the Harbour). Sites in Wellington Harbour were hypothesised to have higher monthly recruitment rates of mussels and barnacles and greater barnacle colonisation after 1 year. Surveys were conducted to quantify community differences. In Wellington Harbour, the mid-intertidal zone was dominated by the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis and the barnacle Chamaesipho columna and the high intertidal zone by C. columna. In contrast, on the south coast mussels were almost completely absent from both tidal heights and barnacles (predominantly Chamaesipho brunnea) were sparse. In the high zone, monthly recruitment and long term colonisation (over 1 year) of barnacles was much greater in the Harbour; in the mid-intertidal zone, mussel recruitment was up to two orders of magnitude greater in the Harbour than the south coast. Species-specific recruitment patterns differed between the locations, however and were consistent with those of adult abundance.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 490 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-46
Author(s):  
WENDY A. NELSON ◽  
KATE F. NEILL ◽  
BRENTON A. TWIST ◽  
JUDY E. SUTHERLAND

A new genus in the order Sporolithales (Corallinophycidae, Rhodophyta), Roseapetra farriae gen. et sp. nov. is described, based on material from northern New Zealand. Previously placed in the genus Heydrichia on the basis of morpho-anatomical characters, phylogenetic analyses have shown that this northern New Zealand taxon is not resolved with either Heydrichia or Sporolithon, the two genera currently recognized in this order. Roseapetra displays the key diagnostic features of the order, namely the production of cruciately divided tetrasporangia singly within calcified sporangial compartments. In Roseapetra the tetrasporangia are surrounded by an involucre, and mature tetrasporangia are subtended by up to three stalk cells. The tetrasporangial compartments are shed once spores have been released. Gametangial conceptacles are not shed but become buried, with secondary meristem producing lens-like areas of regrowth. While there are several morpho-anatomical characters that separate Roseapetra and Sporolithon, there are none that can be used to distinguish Roseapetra from Heydrichia: recognition of Roseapetra requires sequence data. Roseapetra farriae is found growing in the low intertidal zone on rocky reefs in shaded, understorey habitats.


Radiocarbon ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 975-984 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. G. Hogg ◽  
T. F. G. Higham ◽  
J. Dahm

We measured the 14C content of 36 living marine molluscs from Tairua Harbour and the rocky coast on the Coromandel Peninsula of New Zealand. We identified species suitable for radiocarbon dating and show that the open marine intertidal zone is enriched in 14C compared to the open marine subtidal zone or estuary. We also found a uniform 14C distribution in the Tairua Harbour, by analyzing samples of the estuarine bivalve Austrovenus stutchbwyi collected up to 5 km from the harbor entrance.


1960 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 182 ◽  
Author(s):  
I Bennett ◽  
EC Pope

The environmental factors and the zonation of the plants and animals on the exposed rocky coasts of Tasmania are described, and the findings of the present survey are compared with those of other workers both in Tasmania and in southeast Australia generally. A distinct biota, traces of which were first noticed in Victoria by the present authors (1963), is evident on Tasmanian shores, and the validity of the authors' cool temperate Maugean Province is reaffirmed. This paper concludes the series of ecological studies (Dakin, Bennett, and Pope 1948; Bennett and Pope 1953) on the intertidal zone of south-eastern Australia.


2013 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Hily ◽  
Jacques Grall ◽  
Laurent Chauvaud ◽  
Morgane Lejart ◽  
Jacques Clavier

Many autochthonous and alien macroinvertebrates of the intertidal zone are biocalcifiers, and the present study proposes a first assessment of their calcimass and their annual calcium carbonate (CaCO3) production at a regional scale, along 500 km of the coastline of Brittany, France, which represents a wide range of the rocky-shore habitats commonly encountered in the north-eastern Atlantic region. All sites considered together gave a mean calcimass estimate of 5327 g m–2. The corresponding mean CaCO3 gross production was 2584 g m–2 year–1. The net production (including dissolution) by biocalcification was 2384 g CaCO3 m–2 year–1. Estimations of CO2 production via both calcification and respiration were carried out in particular for the phylum Mollusca and for crustacean barnacles, dominating in terms of calcimass. Mean CO2 production obtained by summing CO2 fluxes related to net CaCO3 production and respiration for all sampled sites was 22.9 mol m–2 year–1. These results illustrate the significance of CO2 production during biogenic CaCO3 precipitation of intertidal invertebrates in such temperate coastal environment compared with tropical zones and the contribution of the shelves to the global CaCO3 budget.


1953 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 105 ◽  
Author(s):  
I Bennett ◽  
EC Pope

This paper continues previous ecological studies (Dakin, Bennett, and Pope 1948) of the intertidal zone of south-eastern Australia. The environmental factors and the zonation of the animals and plants on the exposed rocky coasts of Victoria are described. As a result of this survey a rearrangement of the biogeographical provinces of the Australian littoral is made, and a new Cool-temperate fauna and flora are recognized on the coast of Victoria.


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