Abstract

We propose an integrative approach that explains patterns of recruitment to adult populations in sessile organisms by considering the numbers of individuals and their body size. A recruitment model, based on a small number of parameters, was developed for sessile organisms and tested using the barnacle Semibalanus balanoides, a marine invertebrate inhabiting North Atlantic intertidal shores. Incorporating barnacle body size improved model fit beyond that based on density alone, showing that growth played an important role in how resource limitation affected survival. Our approach uncovered the following: First, changes in the shape of the recruitment curve resulted from the balance between individual growth and mortality. Second, recruitment was limited by the least plastic trait used to characterise body size, operculum area. Basal area, a trait that responded to increases in barnacle density, did not contribute significantly to explain patterns of recruitment. Third, some temporal variation is explained by changes in the amount of space occupied by shells of dead barnacles: at high cover barnacles are densely packed and these shells remain long after death. Fourth, seasonal variation and spatial variation in survival can be separated from that resulting from resource limitation; survival was predicted for two different shores and four sampling times using a single recruitment model. We conclude that applying this integrative approach to recruitment will lead to a considerable advance in understanding patterns of mortality of early stages of sessile organisms.

Highlights

  • Recruitment, the process by which young are incorporated into adult cohorts, is a key contributor to the structure and dynamics of populations

  • Recent work on sessile benthic invertebrates suggests that variation in input of new individuals to benthic populations can have both positive and negative effects on adult abundance [7]

  • Present theory of recruitment in marine organisms and its impacts on community ecology has attempted to integrate processes occurring at all stages of the life cycles [8]

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Summary

Introduction

Recruitment, the process by which young are incorporated into adult cohorts, is a key contributor to the structure and dynamics of populations. The input of new individuals to a population is followed by a critical period, generally of high mortality [1], during which patterns of adult abundance are established. To what extent spatial and temporal variation in the input of new individuals determines local adult dynamics has been experimentally tested and modelled extensively in marine systems [2,3]. Recent work on sessile benthic invertebrates suggests that variation in input of new individuals to benthic populations can have both positive and negative effects on adult abundance [7].

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