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Physical and biological conditions on a steep intertidal gradient at Rottnest Island, Western Australia
Author(s) -
BLACK ROBERT,
FISHER KINGSLEY,
HILL ADAM,
McSHANE PAUL
Publication year - 1979
Publication title -
australian journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1442-9993
pISSN - 0307-692X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-9993.1979.tb01198.x
Subject(s) - intertidal zone , limpet , shore , standing crop , intertidal ecology , rocky shore , ecology , algae , oceanography , biology , geology , environmental science , biomass (ecology)
Seven species of grazing molluscs, two littorinids, one nerite, three limpets and one chiton, lived on the vertical intertidal rock wall at the landward edge of the coastal limestone platforms at Rottnest Island, Western Australia. On the average, the vertical ranges of these species overlapped broadly, although a consistent zonation pattern was conspicuous from the platform surface upwards for 2 m. On these vertical intertidal shores, physical and biological conditions were predicted quantitatively from easily made measurements of vertical height on the shore; the percentage of time any shore level was immersed in seawater, the percent weight loss of plaster clods, the standing crop of algae, and the growth rate of the limpet, Notoacmea onychitis , all decreased linearly or semi‐logarithmically with increasing height on the shore. The standing crop of animals was greatest, largely due to the presence of the chiton, between 40 and 70 cm from the platform surface and decreased rapidly down the shore and more gradually towards higher shore levels. We interpret this information and the positive correlation between algal production rate, and egestion rate of the animal community at various levels of the shore as evidence supporting the idea that food may be in short supply on these shores.