Abstract

The relative abundance patterns of several sessile epifaunal species occurring subtidally on large artificial substrata (pilings) were examined under experimental conditions involving the manipulation of densities of the echinoid Arbacia punctulata (Lamarck). The foraging activities of this predator could denude the substratum of most species with notable exceptions including the colonial hydroid Hydractinia echinata Fleming and the sponge Xestospongia halichondroides (Wilson). Moreover, these were the only two of the twenty most common species which did not significantly change in relative abundance over the experimental period. Both species had low recruitment rates and were commonly associated with substrata which had been submerged for several years. Neither species aggressively interacted with adjacent spatial competitors but instead, appeared to employ a defensive space utilization ‘strategy’. Provision of unoccupied substrata by Arbacia was apparently the major factor favoring both recruitment and growth of Hydractinia, which covered up to 30% of the area on the oldest pilings. More recently submerged substrata were covered by species such as Schizoporella errata (Waters) which had a much higher recruitment rate but was commonly overgrown by several other species. Recruitment rate, competitive ability, and vegetative growth are discussed in terms of the size of the substratum and the possibility of biased sampling in fouling studies. The widespread introduction of large artificial substrata into the natural environment has considerably altered the structure of the natural habitat and constitutes a potentially important selective force for changes in settlement preferences, especially among species such as Hydractinia which persist and become abundant on these substrata.

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