1. An experimental test of the effects of variation in recruitment intensity on intertidal community composition
- Author
-
Forde, Samantha E. and Raimondi, Peter T.
- Subjects
- *
SEASHORE ecology , *BIOTIC communities - Abstract
The rocky intertidal has been a model system for experimentally testing hypotheses regarding the factors that structure natural communities. Many ecologists have proposed that changes in the intensity of recruitment of individuals into a community should influence community structure. Past work investigating this hypothesis has primarily been surveys of recruitment and community structure across large spatial scales. Surprisingly, no researchers to date have manipulated recruitment into a rocky intertidal community to assess the response of interactions of the whole community to variation in recruitment intensity. We manipulated the densities of Balanus glandula and Chthamalus spp. recruits across a four-fold difference at two sites spanning the Monterey Bay, California, USA, to experimentally test if differences in recruitment intensity influenced initial changes in community composition and if these changes persisted through time. The results of this work indicate that differences in recruitment influence community composition initially, but that these changes can be short-lived. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF