Abstract

SUMMARY The effects of UV radiation (UVR) on growth of sporelings of Melobesia membranacea (Esper) Lamouroux, Lithophyllum incrustans Philippi and Mesophyllum lichenoides (Ellis) Lemoine, were investigated by culturing the algae under different doses of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) only and PAR + UVR. Under natural conditions, the light fields occurring in the habitats of the three species differ substantially. Whereas M. lichenoides and L. incrustans inhabit sun-exposed places in the eulittoral and upper part of the sublittoral, M. membranacea grows as an epiphyte in shady crevices in the eulittoral, where irradiance is < 10% of that in sun-exposed places. The relative growth rate (RGR) of sporelings of these non-geniculate coralline algae was affected by the UVR. The extent of harmful UVR effects on growth rate showed a similar increase as a function of the logarithm of the dose in the three species, inferred by a similar slope in all the linear regressions for a given action spectrum. The inhibition of growth under the PAR + UVR showed similar features in the two species of non-geniculate coralline species from sun-exposed places, that is, similar intercepts and slopes in the linear regressions of RGR as a function of the logarithm of the biologically effective dose.

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