Authors
Ellen J Weerman, Peter MJ Herman, Johan Van de Koppel
Publication date
2011/10/28
Journal
Marine ecology progress series
Volume
440
Pages
95-103
Description
Natural ecosystems can show regular spatial vegetation patterns, which develop from small-scale ecological interactions. Some studies suggest that grazers can play a major role in controlling vegetation distribution in ecosystems with regular vegetation patterns, but the distribution of grazers and the effects of grazing on vegetation in spatially patterned ecosystems remains poorly understood. Here, we study how macrofaunal grazers are distributed on a spatially patterned intertidal flat and how they interact with benthic microalgae. The study was carried out on an intertidal flat where each year a regular spatial pattern of diatom-covered hummocks and water-filled hollows develops. In 2 consecutive years, benthic algal biomass was 5-fold lower in the hollows compared with the hummocks, whereas benthic macrofauna was equally abundant on both hummocks and hollows. In the laboratory we evaluated the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
EJ Weerman, PMJ Herman, J Van de Koppel - Marine ecology progress series, 2011