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A non-native amphipod consumes eelgrass inflorescences in San Francisco Bay
- Source :
- Marine Ecology Progress Series. 451:107-118
- Publication Year :
- 2012
- Publisher :
- Inter-Research Science Center, 2012.
-
Abstract
- Intense herbivory can alter habitat characteristics, and grazing on reproductivestructures can reduce plant fitness and long-term population stability. Herbivory on seagrasses isoften limited to epiphytes; however, direct grazing has been observed recently in several systems.In San Francisco Bay, California, we documented extensive damage to leaves and especially inflo-rescences of eelgrass Zostera marina concurrent with blooms of the non-native amphipod Ampi -thoe valida. Field surveys found peaks of A. valida abundance when eelgrass was flowering, andgreater abundance on flowering than vegetative shoots, with particularly high abundances onreproductive structures (spathes) in late developmental stages (with ripe fruits or post seedrelease). Laboratory experiments showed that A. valida consumed leaf and spathe tissue (as wellas whole fruits), but usually preferred spathes to leaves. Spathes are structurally complex andlikely provide better habitat, increasing opportunity for consumption. Low field algal abundancesdo not fully explain eelgrass herbivory, as amphipods grazed eelgrass substantially even whenoffered algae. When presented with eelgrass from both the amphipod’s native (Virginia) andinvaded range (California), the latter was consumed at significantly higher rates. Neither nutrientnor phenolic content adequately explain the tissue preference. Greater size of California eelgrassmay have promoted incidental feeding on spathes used as habitat, but does not explain a Califor-nia bias during consumption of structurally simple leaves. Field densities and laboratory consump-tion rates suggest that this non-native amphipod could remove all seeds in a California eelgrassmeadow in 1−3 wk, thus challenging maintenance of genetic diversity and long-term meadowpersistence.KEY WORDS: Seagrass · Zostera marina · Ampithoe valida · Herbivory · Seed predation
Details
- ISSN :
- 16161599 and 01718630
- Volume :
- 451
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Marine Ecology Progress Series
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........b41dae99ac05ff741bee3a4c642b002e
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3354/meps09569