Abstract

Shifts between the alternate stable states of sea urchin barren grounds and kelp forests correspond to sea urchin density. In the Aleutian Archipelago, green sea urchins Strongylocentrotus polyacanthus are the dominant herbivores that graze kelp forests. Sea urchin recruitment is an important driver that influences sea urchin density, particularly in the absence of top-down control from a keystone predator such as the sea otter Enhydra lutris. To understand how the biological community may influence patterns of sea urchin recruitment, we compared sea urchin recruit (size ≤20 mm) densities with biomass of other benthic organisms in both barren ground and kelp forest habitats at 9 islands across the Aleutian Archipelago. Patterns of biological community structure between the 2 habitats did not explain patterns of sea urchin recruits; however, the same 10 specific taxa were found to correlate with sea urchin recruits in each habitat. Taxa that showed strong positive correlations included Codium, Constantinea, Schizymenia, and hydrozoans, while strong negative correlations were observed with Pachyarthron and Pugettia. Weak positive correlations were observed with Alcyonidium and ascidiaceans in both habitats, while weak variable relationships were detected with Polysiphonia and Corallina between habitats. The observed species-specific relationships may be due to small sea urchin displacement by larger conspecifics, larval responses to settlement cues, post-settlement survival via biogenic refugia, or potentially predation. These potential species-specific interactions were apparent, regardless of habitat, and it can be inferred that they would be preserved in the presence or absence of keystone predation.

Highlights

  • INTRODUCTIONSea urchins are often the key herbivore causing the transition between the alternate stable states of kelp forest (high fleshy macroalgal cover and low urchin density) to barren ground (low fleshy macroalgal cover and high urchin density) habitats on temperate rocky reefs (Estes & Duggins 1995, Gagnon et al 2004, Filbee-Dexter & Scheibling 2014)

  • Sea urchins are often the key herbivore causing the transition between the alternate stable states of kelp forest to barren ground habitats on temperate rocky reefs (Estes & Duggins 1995, Gagnon et al 2004, Filbee-Dexter & Scheibling 2014)

  • Mar Ecol Prog Ser 663: 115–125, 2021 urchins can have on habitat and ecosystem structure and high urchin density) and kelp forests, there known, the drivers of sea urchin demographics are would likely be different biological correlates of sea complex

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Sea urchins are often the key herbivore causing the transition between the alternate stable states of kelp forest (high fleshy macroalgal cover and low urchin density) to barren ground (low fleshy macroalgal cover and high urchin density) habitats on temperate rocky reefs (Estes & Duggins 1995, Gagnon et al 2004, Filbee-Dexter & Scheibling 2014). Habitat shifts towards sea urchin barrens have been reported across temperate latitudes globally (Johnson et al 2011, Ling et al 2015, Krumhansl et al 2016). If there were similar enced by environmental gradients (Ebert 2010, Ling species associated with sea urchin recruitment in et al 2015) and can vary greatly across regions due both habitats, this would suggest overarching speto environmental forcing on sea urchins through cies interactions that are key drivers to sea urchin ontogeny (Estes & Duggins 1995). Post-settlement survival is a fundamental process in sea urchin demographics

MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
Correlations with macroalgae
Correlations with invertebrates
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