Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5766261 Marine Environmental Research 2017 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Nutrient addition during both winter and spring promoted earlier regrowth of Caulerpa cylindracea equally.•Native species did not respond to nutrient addition during winter or spring.•Impacts of the invader upon the native community were weak, likely as a result of the stressfulness of the environment.

Nutrient enrichment of coastal waters can enhance the invasibility and regrowth of non-native species. The invasive alga Caulerpa cylindracea has two distinct phases: a well-studied fast-growing summer phase, and a winter latent phase. To investigate the effects of nutrient enrichment on the regrowth of the seaweed after the winter resting-phase, a manipulative experiment was carried out in intertidal rockpools in the North-western Mediterranean. Nutrients were supplied under different temporal regimes: press (constant release from January to May), winter pulse (January to March) and spring pulse (March to May). Independently from the temporal characteristics of their addition, nutrients accelerated the re-growth of C. cylindracea after the winter die-back, resulting in increased percentage covers at the peak of the growing season. Nutrient addition did not influence the number and length of fronds and the biomass. Native components of the algal community did not respond to nutrient additions. Our results show that nutrient supply can favour the spread of C. cylindracea even when occurring at a time of the year at which the seaweed is not actively growing.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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