Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate whether the success of invasive Caulerpa cylindracea (Caulerpa racemosa var. cylindracea) in Mediterranean habitats may be linked to particular nutritional requirements and/or nutrient accumulation/reallocation dynamics within the algal thallus. To this end, a manipulative field experiment was carried out transplanting C. cylindracea and supplying nutrients to subtidal rocky macroalgal assemblages. Morphological features of C. cylindracea were measured, while percentage cover and tissue nitrogen, carbon and phosphorus were determined for C. cylindracea and two co-occurring species (the introduced Laurencia chondrioides and native Flabellia petiolata) in nutrient-enriched and unenriched conditions. Growth of C. cylindracea was greater in the nutrient-enriched plots while no effect of nutrient enrichment was detected in co-occurring macroalgae. A particularly high requirement for nitrogen has been observed in C. cylindracea, but without severe N-limitation, while a general nutritional state of P-limitation was detected in both invasive and co-occurring macroalgae. The absence of inhibition in hypertrophic conditions and under high levels of ammonia together with a strong uptake and quick reallocation of nutrients within the coenocytic thallus probably represent the main advantages over the other co-occurring species which could explain part of the success of C. cylindracea in the Mediterranean Sea.

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