Detailed information for reference 17047

 Hill, N.A., C. Blount, A.G.B. Poore, D. Worthington, and P.D. Steinberg (2003) Grazing effects of the sea urchin Centrostephanus rodgersii in two contrasting rocky reef habitats: effects of urchin density and its implications for the fishery. Marine and Freshwater Research 54(691–700).

 

Comment or Correction

Report a problem or comment on this reference.

Thank you!

Certification information

Reference not (yet) certified

Reference change log

No changes logged

Reference record internal details

Reference ID 17047
Reference type journalarticle
Authors Hill, N.A.
Blount, C.
Poore, A.G.B.
Worthington, D.
Steinberg, P.D.
Publication Year (for display) 2003
Publication Year (for sorting) 2003
Title Grazing effects of the sea urchin _Centrostephanus rodgersii _in two contrasting rocky reef habitats: effects of urchin density and its implications for the fishery
Secondary Title Marine and Freshwater Research
Secondary Authors  
Tertiary Title  
Tertiary Authors  
Volume 54
Issue 691–700
Pages  
Place published  
Published  
Date  
URL
Abstract
The sea urchin Centrostephanus rodgersii plays an important role in determining the abundance and composition of benthic macroalgae in New South Wales. Centrostephanus rodgersii is commonly found in areas devoid of foliose algae (termed 'barrens habitat'), which abruptly change into areas rich in foliose algae (termed 'fringe habitat'). Complementary experiments were used to investigate the impact of C. rodgersii grazing on algal assemblages at a range of densities in the barrens and fringe habitats. Although 33% of the natural density of C. rodgersii maintained barrens areas relatively free of foliose algae, only densities exceeding natural densities within barrens habitat cleared areas dominated by macroalgae. The impact of grazing was not linearly related to density in either habitat, which suggests that both the barrens and fringe habitats are stable and will persist unless there is a dramatic decrease in urchin densities in barrens areas or a large influx into fringe areas. These findings have significant implications for the commercial harvesting of C. rodgersii. They imply that reducing urchin densities in barrens habitats, or translocating urchins from barrens to fringe habitats in order to improve roe quality, will not significantly alter the algal assemblage of either habitat in the short term (less than 3 months).
Keywords  
Remarks  
Reference Contributor Tag gpoore
Last Changed Wed Dec 5 10:57:42 2012