Abstract

The succession of fouling organisms that settled on asbestos plates immersed at Garden Island. Western Australia, was partially caused by the settlement patterns of the species involved. Both temporal variations in the abundance and continuity of settlement of each species and the age of the communities in which each species settled abundantly contributed to producing the succession. Additionally, temporal variations in the settlement of each species probably resulted in variability in the pattern of succession. Balanus and Spirorbis, the two earliest species in the succession, settled continuously and abundantly so that they immediately occupied a substantial area. The species which predominated later in the succession, Anomia, Ostrea, encrusting bryozoans, and Mytilus, settled discontinuously so that they were unlikely to settle immediately on a newly immersed surface. Additionally, Anomia, Ostrea, and the encrusting bryozoans did not settle abundantly and did not occupy a substantial area while small. Thus, there was also a delay between the time when these species settled and the time when they had grown sufficiently large to occupy a substantial area. Mytilus was the only species that settled abundantly in established communities and thus could persist indefinitely in a community. Settlement of the other species which occurred earlier in the succession was largely restricted to newly immersed plates and consequently these species were limited in their duration in the succession by the life-spans of the individual organisms.

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