Abstract

M. Copertino, S.D. Connell and A. Cheshire. 2005. The prevalence and production of turf-forming algae on a temperate subtidal coast. Phycologia 44: 241–248.This study shows that canopy-forming algae, composed mainly of fucoids and the kelp Ecklonia radiata (both Phaeophycea), dominated space on South Australian coasts relative to turf-forming algae. However, where canopy-forming algae are absent turf-forming algae are the primary occupiers of space (~ 70%). On some reefs where canopy-forming algae are restricted in spatial extent, turfs can occupy as much as 40% of reefs. Turf-forming algae are an abundant component of algal assemblages, but relatively little is known about their contribution to the primary productivity on temperate reefs, relative to canopy-forming species. This study reveals that net productivity rates of turfs at one South Australian location were very high across depths (1.3–2.9 g C m−2 day−1 or 23.2–88.0 mg C g ash-free dry weight−1 day−1), comparable to the values discovered on tropical reefs. Although turf-forming algae are much more productive than canopy-forming algae on a biomass basis, the annual net production per area is two to seven times lower for turfs than for canopy-forming algae. However, if negligible exudation rates are assumed for turfs (up to 1%), the biomass of carbon produced by turf algae represents 44–71% of the carbon incorporated into biomass of kelps. Taken together, these results suggest that while canopy-forming algae can be correctly assumed to be the major source of total carbon produced on temperate reefs, the contribution of turf-forming algae may be substantial to the biomass production and turnover on South Australian reefs.

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