Behaviour of sea urchin Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis grazing fronts: food-mediated aggregation and density-dependent facilitation
Date
2007
Authors
Lauzon-Guay, Jean-Sebastien
Scheibling, Robert Eric
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Abstract
The occurrence of destructive grazing fronts is a common phenomenon in sea urchins, but
mechanisms governing front formation and dynamics remain poorly understood. We experimentally
examined the effect of kelp biomass on the aggregative behavior and movement of a front of green sea
urchins Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis at a wave-exposed site on the Atlantic coast of Nova
Scotia. We varied kelp (Laminaria digitata and L. longicruris) abundance in 2 x 2 m plots adjacent
to the front in 3 treatments: 50 % plant removal, and 100 % frond removal and unmanipulated control.
In each treatment, we monitored the position of the front and urchin density at the leading edge
over 24 d. The mean advance of the front in 24 d (2.27 m) did not differ between treatments, but
urchin density was greatest in the control (74.9 urchins 0.25 m(-2)) and lower in whole plant (54.3)
and frond (39.4) removal treatments. When urchin density was used as a covariate, front advance was
inversely related to kelp biomass and greater in frond and plant removal treatments than in the
control. Together, urchin density and kelp biomass explained 75 % of variation in front advance.
These findings provide the first direct evidence that urchins redistribute themselves along a front
to concentrate in patches of greatest food availability. Temporal variation in urchin density at the
front was inversely correlated with wave height, and individual grazing rates increased with urchin
density, which may explain seasonal variation in front dynamics observed in previous studies.
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Citation
Lauzon-Guay, Jean-Sebastien, and Robert E. Scheibling. 2007. "Behaviour of sea urchin Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis grazing fronts: food-mediated
aggregation and density-dependent facilitation." Marine Ecology Progress Series 329: 191-204. doi:10.3354/meps329191