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The grazing effect of limpets on the macroalgal community of a rocky intertidal shore

journal contribution
posted on 1992-03-01, 00:00 authored by E K Beovich, Gerry QuinnGerry Quinn
Abstract Abundance of macro‐algae in the mid‐littoral zone on a Victorian intertidal rocky shore varied seasonally, algae being rare in Summer and common in Winter and Spring. Field experiments demonstrated that, of two species of grazing limpets (Cellana tramoserica and Siphonana diemenensis), only Siphonaria had a major effect on the abundance of foliose algae (e.g. Scytopsiphon lomeniarid) and neither species had a great effect on the encrusting algae (Ralfsia spp.). There was no evidence of competition for food between the two species of limpets, in contrast with results found for similar species in New South Wales.

History

Journal

Australian journal of ecology

Volume

17

Issue

1

Pagination

75 - 82

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

0307-692X

eISSN

1442-9993

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

[1992, John Wiley & Sons]

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