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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2016-12-10
    Description: In 2010, harvesting of kelp ( Laminaria hyperborea ) was performed for the first time in the county of Nord-Trøndelag, Norway. Underwater video surveys were performed just prior to harvesting and then on a yearly basis over a 4-year period to document the development of the kelp vegetation and sea urchin abundances. In addition, kelp plants were collected before harvesting and then again 4 years later for measurements of plant morphology, age, cortical growth and epiphytes. After 4 years, L. hyperborea had regained its dominance at the harvested sites, however, plant age, sizes and epiphytes were still below pre-harvesting levels. However, the kelp biomass appeared restored 4 years after harvesting, because of the high density of the recovering kelp vegetation. Furthermore, measurements of the cortical growth zones in transverse section of the stipes of the recovering kelp plants showed a higher growth rate during the post-harvesting period, than in plants from pristine kelp beds. Abundance of sea urchins was low during the entire monitoring period and grazing effects on the recovering kelp vegetation, at the harvested sites, appeared to be small. Interestingly, the age structure of plants collected 4 years after harvesting showed that kelp recruits present as understory vegetation prior to harvesting, must have contributed substantially to the restocking of kelp. However, the density of understory kelp recruits 4 years after harvesting was significantly lower than it had been prior to harvesting, and this may lead to a slower recovery if future harvests occur before the stocks of understory kelp recruits are restored.
    Print ISSN: 1054-3139
    Electronic ISSN: 1095-9289
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences , Physics
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-07-02
    Description: The response of rocky shore ecosystems to increased nutrient availability was examined in eight land-based mesocosms designed for hard-bottom littoral communities built at Marine Research Station Solbergstrand (Norway). The average seawater volume in each basin was 9 m3 with an average water residence time of about 2 h. A tidal regime resembling that in the fjord was maintained in the basins, and waves were generated regularly. NH4NO3 and H3PO4, at a constant molar NP ratio of 16:1, was added into 6 basins at concentrations 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32 μM DIN above the background DIN concentration during 1 1/2 years. Two mesocosms were kept as control treatment. Marine communities were introduced into the basins two years prior to the start of nutrient dosage. The effects of nutrient enrichment were few and only marginal during the first year of nutrient addition, while some effects became more obvious during the second year. The growth rate of the periphyton and fast-growing macroalgae communities was stimulated by nutrient enrichment, while the response was less evident among the perennial fucoids. The structure of the macroalgal communities, however, did not change during 16 months' measurements. In contrast, growth on artificial rock substrates during the same period of time revealed intensive growth of the fast-growing Ulva lactuca in high-dosed basins compared with low-dosed and control basins, which were dominated by the fucoid Fucus serratus. The fauna communities exhibited only a minor response to nutrient treatment. The common periwinkle Littorina littorea, however, appeared with increased abundance in the high-dosed basins. The total system metabolism tended to increase slightly, but not significantly, with increased nutrient loading.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2018-09-12
    Description: The aim of this study was to determine whether the experimental nutrient enrichment of littoral rocky shore communities would be followed by a predicted accumulation of fast-growing opportunistic algae and a subsequent loss of perennial benthic vegetation. Inorganic nitrogen (N) and potassium (P) was added to eight concrete mesocosms inhabited by established littoral communities dominated by fucoids. The response to nutrient enrichment was followed for almost 2 1/2 years. Fast-growing opportunistic algae (periphyton and ephemeral green algae) grew significantly faster in response to nutrient enrichment, but the growth of red filamentous algae and large perennial brown algae was unaffected. However, these changes were not followed by comparable changes in the biomass and composition of the macroalgae. The biomass of opportunistic algae was stimulated only marginally by the nutrient enrichment, and perennial brown algae (fucoids) remained dominant in the mesocosm regardless of nutrient treatment level. Established rocky shore communities thus seem able to resist the effects of heavy nutrient loading. We found that the combined effects of the heavy competition for space and light imposed by canopy-forming algae, preferential grazing on opportunistic algae by herbivores, and physical disturbance, succeeded by a marked export of detached opportunistic algae, prevented the fast-growing algae from becoming dominant. However, recruitment studies showed that the opportunistic algae would become dominant when free space was available under conditions of high nutrient loading and low grazing pressure. These results show that established communities of perennial algae and associated fauna in rocky shore environments can prevent or delay the accumulation of bloom-forming opportunistic algae and that the replacement of long-lived macroalgae by opportunistic species at high nutrient loading may be a slow process. Nutrient enrichment may not, in itself, be enough to stimulate structural changes in rocky shore communities.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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