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  • 1995-1999  (1)
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    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Marine biology 129 (1997), S. 541-548 
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Several recent field studies have found disproportionately high barnacle settlement rates (expressed on a per-area basis) in situations where the amount of suitable substrate is reduced, either due to occupation by other individuals or to physical processes. We call this phenomenon the intensification effect; it is not included in many models of benthic populations, which assume that the per-area settlement rate is a constant, or in field larval-collector studies, where number of larvae caught is assumed to be a function only of larval supply. In this paper we derive a simple Markov chain model that generates the intensification effect. It describes the fate of a settling larva, which may be washed out of the system or may attempt to settle in suitable or unsuitable substrate. If it lands on unsuitable substrate, it returns to the water column to try again. At low values of the washout rate, the per-area settlement rate decreases with increasing substrate area. At high values of the washout rate, per-area settlement rate is constant. We conducted a set of laboratory experiments in March through April 1995 with barnacle larvae (Semibalanus balanoides Linnaeus) to illustrate the predictions of the model. Substrate area was manipulated by varying the number of settling panels available, and the larval loss rate was adjusted by manipulating the residence time of larvae in the experimental units (1.5 h or 12 h). As predicted by the model, in the 12-h treatment settlement per area decreased nonlinearly as the amount of substrate increased, whereas in the 1.5-h treatment no differences were found. These results explain and predict the intensification effect, and suggest that variability in the proportion of suitable substrate may be an important factor in determining variability in settlement rate.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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