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Accounting for environmental stress in restoration of intertidal foundation species

Authors :
Rachel J. Clausing
Gina De La Fuente
Annalisa Falace
Mariachiara Chiantore
Clausing, Rachel J.
De La Fuente, Gina
Falace, Annalisa
Chiantore, Mariachiara
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Restoration of foundation species in historical habitat may be difficult if adult facilitation is obligatory for survival of early life stages. 2. On intertidal Mediterranean coasts, large-scale loss of the dominant forest- forming macroalga Ericaria amentacea have prompted restoration efforts using recruits. Yet, early life stages may be more susceptible to the abiotic stress that characterizes their habitat. 3. We tested strategies to enhance resilience of lab-cultured juveniles of E. amen- tacea to environmental stress in historical habitat lacking conspecifics. Juveniles were exposed in culture to fluctuations of the dominant physical stressors, irra- diance and temperature, and then outplanted in upper and lower zones of their native intertidal range. 4. Without adult canopy, juvenile outplant survival was limited to the lower tidal range, with nearly complete mortality in the upper zone. Survival was also strongly determined by spatial clumping of recruits within the outplant sub- strate. Longer-term growth in the lower zone was enhanced by fluctuating mild stress in culture, with variable irradiance and concurrent heat pulses increas- ing post-outplant cover by 40%–60% after 4 months. Clumping also promoted growth across experimental treatments. 5. Synthesis and applications. Reliance on self-facilitation feedbacks is a common barrier to foundation species restoration in high-stress habitats. Our results sug- gest that without adult habitat amelioration, environmental stress limits recruit survival in intertidal algal forest. Yet, exposure to transient, low environmental stress in culture and outplanting of clumped individuals may confer resilience and allow successful establishment of early life stages in zones of reduced abi- otic stress, providing a source for gradual colonization of more high-stress areas.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f37df3ce037777a14f230e6ef4f3e46c