Introduced Species: 2004 Publications
Castilla, J.C., Lagos, N.A., and Cerda, M. Marine
ecosystem engineering by the alien ascidian Pyura praeputialis on
a mid-intertidal rocky shore. Marine Ecology Progress
Series 268: 119-130, 2004.
© Inter-Research
Notes: Engineer species transform ecosystems
due to their own growth, constitute an integral part of altered environments,
and provide new habitats for other species, thus affecting biodiversity and
the ecosystem. On rocky shores inside Antofagasta Bay (Northern Chile), the
alien ascidian Pyura praeputialis, an engineer
species, creates broad belts and dense 3-dimensional matrices that modify the
intertidal habitat structure. In all, 116 species of macro-invertebrates and
algae inhabit this habitat, compared with the 66 species inhabiting adjacent
intertidal rocky shores which lack P. praeputialis. Of the 145 species
recorded at the seascape scale (encompassing both mid-intertidal habitat), 55%
were found exclusively in intertidal P. praeputialis matrices. Along
the coastal gradient, patterns in beta-diversity emerge due to the addition of
a new set of species to the community inhabiting the P. praeputialis matrices
and, to a lesser extent, from spatial turnover. We found differences in the shape
of the species frequency distribution between the communities inhabiting the
engineered and non-engineered mid-intertidal habitats. However, within the same
habitat type, there was no difference in the species frequency distribution between
functional groups. Occurrence of macro-algae was not affected by habitat type,
but occurence of macro-invertebrates increased significantly in P. praeputialis matrices. P.
praeputialis increases species richness at local and seascape scales by
providing a novel mid-intertidal habitat which is used by mobile and vagile macro-invertebrates
that otherwise would remain excluded from this intertidal level.
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