Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4540609 Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The effect of test panel submersion season on the colonization of biofouling communities in a tropical coast revealed that the effects of panel submersion time should be taken into consideration for modelling fouling community recruitment dynamics in coastal systems or during the field trials of antifouling coatings. Wooden test panels fitted onto a raft were submerged during pre-monsoon, monsoon and post-monsoon seasons for the development of the biofouling community. Results showed considerable variation in the colonization of fouling communities on test panels submerged during different seasons. Barnacles, tubeworms, ascidians and seaweeds were the major fouling communities that colonized the test panels. The total biomass of the fouling communities that settled on the post-monsoon season panels varied from the initial value of 2.72 g dm−2 to a maximum of 44.5 g dm−2. On the panels submerged during monsoon season, the total biomass of fouling communities varied between 0.78 g dm−2 and 69.9 g dm−2. The total fouling biomass on the pre-monsoon season panels varied between 2.95 and 33.5 g dm−2. Barnacles were the initial colonizers on the panels submerged during pre-monsoon and post-monsoon seasons. Soft-bodied organisms such as ascidians dominated the monsoon season-initiated panel series during the initial period.

► Recruitment of fouling communities on panels varied between the seasons. ► Biomass was high on post-monsoon panels. ► Barnacles were abundant on pre-monsoon and post-monsoon panels. ► Ascidians dominated the monsoon season panels.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
Authors
, ,