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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Sargassum muticum (Yendo) Fensholt is an invasive species that is firmly established on intertidal and subtidal rocky shores of Europe and the Pacific coast of North America. Local success and spread of S. muticum is thought to rely on its reproductive potential that seems dependent on exogenous factors like tidal and lunar cycles. This study is the first to compare the reproductive patterns (periodicity of egg expulsion and embryo settlement) of this invader in two different habitats: the middle and low intertidal. The combination
of monthly, daily, and tidal samples at
triplicate sites within each habitat showed a semilunar periodicity of egg expulsion and embryo settlement coincident with increasing tidal amplitude just before full and new moons. In both habitats, duration of each egg expulsion event was 1 week, and embryo settlement occurred during the first daily low tide and with the incoming high tide during spring tides. However, both expulsion
and settlement started 1–2 d earlier, expulsion saturation was faster, and settlement was higher in the mid- compared to the low intertidal. Our results suggest that the exact timing of gamete expulsion and embryo release of S. muticum responds to local factors, including tidal cues, which result in differences between mid- and lowintertidal habitats.
Description
Keywords
Egg expulsion periodicity Settlement periodicity Embryo Reproductive ecology Sargassum muticum Tidal and lunar cycles
Citation
Monteiro, C.A.; Engelen, A.H.; Serrão, E.A.; Santos, R. Habitat differences in the timing of reproduction of the invasive alga sargassum muticum (phaeophyta, sargassaceae) over tidal and lunar cycles, Journal of Phycology, 45, 1, 1-7, 2009.
Publisher
Wiley