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Effects of pulse versus steady recruitment on sessile marine communities
by
Keough, Michael J.
, Sams, Michael A.
in
Animals
/ Aquatic Organisms
/ Australia
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Botryllus schlosseri
/ Communities
/ Community composition
/ Community development
/ COMMUNITY ECOLOGY
/ Community ecology - Original research
/ Community structure
/ Ecological life histories
/ Ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ Error rates
/ growth & development
/ Hydrology/Water Resources
/ invertebrates
/ Invertebrates - growth & development
/ Larvae
/ License plates
/ Life history
/ Life Sciences
/ Marine
/ Marine ecology
/ Plant Sciences
/ Population Dynamics
/ population structure
/ Reproduction
/ spatial distribution
/ Synecology
/ Taxa
/ temporal variation
/ Time Factors
2012
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Effects of pulse versus steady recruitment on sessile marine communities
by
Keough, Michael J.
, Sams, Michael A.
in
Animals
/ Aquatic Organisms
/ Australia
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Botryllus schlosseri
/ Communities
/ Community composition
/ Community development
/ COMMUNITY ECOLOGY
/ Community ecology - Original research
/ Community structure
/ Ecological life histories
/ Ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ Error rates
/ growth & development
/ Hydrology/Water Resources
/ invertebrates
/ Invertebrates - growth & development
/ Larvae
/ License plates
/ Life history
/ Life Sciences
/ Marine
/ Marine ecology
/ Plant Sciences
/ Population Dynamics
/ population structure
/ Reproduction
/ spatial distribution
/ Synecology
/ Taxa
/ temporal variation
/ Time Factors
2012
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Do you wish to request the book?
Effects of pulse versus steady recruitment on sessile marine communities
by
Keough, Michael J.
, Sams, Michael A.
in
Animals
/ Aquatic Organisms
/ Australia
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Botryllus schlosseri
/ Communities
/ Community composition
/ Community development
/ COMMUNITY ECOLOGY
/ Community ecology - Original research
/ Community structure
/ Ecological life histories
/ Ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ Error rates
/ growth & development
/ Hydrology/Water Resources
/ invertebrates
/ Invertebrates - growth & development
/ Larvae
/ License plates
/ Life history
/ Life Sciences
/ Marine
/ Marine ecology
/ Plant Sciences
/ Population Dynamics
/ population structure
/ Reproduction
/ spatial distribution
/ Synecology
/ Taxa
/ temporal variation
/ Time Factors
2012
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Effects of pulse versus steady recruitment on sessile marine communities
Journal Article
Effects of pulse versus steady recruitment on sessile marine communities
2012
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Overview
Variation in patterns of propagule establishment (recruitment) has important effects on population dynamics and the structure of some communities. Most experimental studies have varied recruitment by changing the nature of a single event early in community development, but recruitment can also vary from steady rates of arrival to highly episodic 'pulse' events, causing differences in the temporal spacing of individuals recruiting into patches. We examined whether two different temporal patterns of recruitment of sessile invertebrates affected temperate marine communities in southeastern Australia in two experiments that were run at different times at the same site and that manipulated several different species. Target species entered communities as either a single pulse of recruits within a 2-week period or steady input of the same total number of recruits over a longer time period (5-6 weeks). The pattern of recruitment had variable effects on community structure. The colonial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri did not have a strong influence on community structure whether it recruited in a single pulse or steadily. The cover of B. schlosseri was higher when recruitment occurred as a single pulse. In a second experiment, botryllid ascidians caused changes in the composition of communities when they recruited steadily compared to when they did not recruit or didemnids recruited, but caused no differences in communities when they recruited in a shorter pulse. In contrast, recruitment frequency of didemnid ascidians had little effect, though their presence/absence caused community differences. Though we found that different temporal recruitment patterns can alter community composition, the life history and ecology of particular taxa as well as differences in environmental background processes are likely to influence the strength of these effects.
Publisher
Springer,Springer-Verlag,Springer Nature B.V
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