Coral Reefs: 1999
Publications
Author: Wear,
D.J., Sullivan, M.J., Moore, A.D., and Millie, D.F.
Title: Effects of water-column enrichment on the
production dynamics of three seagrass species and their epiphytic
algae.
Publication: Marine Ecology Progress Series
179: 201-213, 1999.
© Inter-Research
Notes:
Monospecific beds of the seagrasses Halodule wrightii,
Syringodium filiforme and Thalassia testudinum were
enriched with a slow-release Osmocote(TM) (N-P-K) fertilizer from
August 1993 through September 1994. Primary production rates (as
C-14 uptake), biomass (dry weight), and chlorophyll a (chl a)
(measured by HPLC) of epiphytes in enriched beds were
significantly greater than those of epiphytes in control beds.
Based on microscopic observations, the dominant epiphytic algae
were diatoms and red and brown algae. Populations of the brown
alga Myriotrichia subcorymbosa and the red alga
Acrochaetium flexuosum increased greatly in enriched plots
of all 3 seagrass species. Multiple linear regression supported
observational data in that pigment signatures selected for the
dominant epiphytes (fucoxanthin, zeaxanthin, and violaxanthin)
explained 97% of the variation in chi a. A strong correlation
between measured and predicted chi a (r = 0.98) suggested that chi
a is an excellent indicator of epiphytic biomass in this system.
Production rates of blades increased in enriched plots relative to
controls but biomass of blades was unaffected. The strong response
of epiphytes to enrichment suggests that cultural eutrophication
could pose a threat to seagrass beds of Big Lagoon, Perdido Key,
Florida, USA. Negative effects could be manifested as a reduction
in the coverage of shallow- water sediments by seagrass beds
and/or the elimination of 1 or 2 species, possibly converting Big
Lagoon into a seagrass monoculture.
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