Barnacle recruit-adult relationship (full paper published in 2017 in PeerJ 5: article e3444)

Recruitment is a key demographic process for population persistence. This paper focuses on barnacle (Semibalanus balanoides) recruitment. In rocky intertidal habitats from the Gulf of St. Lawrence coast of Nova Scotia (Canada), ice scour is common during the winter. At the onset of intertidal barnac...

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Main Authors: Scrosati, Ricardo Augusto, Ellrich, Julius A.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Center for Open Science 2017
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.31230/osf.io/mvp6w
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spelling crcenteros:10.31230/osf.io/mvp6w 2024-03-03T08:48:45+00:00 Barnacle recruit-adult relationship (full paper published in 2017 in PeerJ 5: article e3444) Scrosati, Ricardo Augusto Ellrich, Julius A. 2017 http://dx.doi.org/10.31230/osf.io/mvp6w unknown Center for Open Science https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode posted-content 2017 crcenteros https://doi.org/10.31230/osf.io/mvp6w 2024-02-07T10:54:40Z Recruitment is a key demographic process for population persistence. This paper focuses on barnacle (Semibalanus balanoides) recruitment. In rocky intertidal habitats from the Gulf of St. Lawrence coast of Nova Scotia (Canada), ice scour is common during the winter. At the onset of intertidal barnacle recruitment in early May (after sea ice has fully melted), mostly only adult barnacles and bare substrate are visible at high elevations in wave-exposed habitats. We conducted a multiannual study to investigate if small-scale barnacle recruitment could be predicted from the density of pre-existing adult barnacles. In a year that exhibited a wide adult density range (ca. 0-130 individuals/dm2), the relationship between adult density and recruit density (scaled to the available area for recruitment, which excluded adult barnacles) was unimodal. In years that exhibited a lower adult density range (ca. 0-40/50 individuals/dm2), the relationship between adult and recruit density was positive and resembled the lower half of the unimodal relationship. Overall, adult barnacle density was able to explain 26-40% of the observed variation in recruit density. The unimodal adult-recruit relationship is consistent with previously documented intraspecific interactions. Between low and intermediate adult densities, the positive nature of the relationship relates to the previously documented fact that settlement-seeking larvae are chemically and visually attracted to adults, which might be important for local population persistence. Between intermediate and high adult densities, where population persistence may be less compromised and the abundant adults may limit recruit growth and survival, the negative nature of the relationship suggests that adult barnacles at increasingly high densities stimulate larvae to settle elsewhere. The unimodal pattern may be especially common on shores with moderate rates of larval supply to the shore, because high rates of larval supply may swamp the coast with settlers, decoupling recruit density ... Other/Unknown Material Sea ice COS Center for Open Science Canada
institution Open Polar
collection COS Center for Open Science
op_collection_id crcenteros
language unknown
description Recruitment is a key demographic process for population persistence. This paper focuses on barnacle (Semibalanus balanoides) recruitment. In rocky intertidal habitats from the Gulf of St. Lawrence coast of Nova Scotia (Canada), ice scour is common during the winter. At the onset of intertidal barnacle recruitment in early May (after sea ice has fully melted), mostly only adult barnacles and bare substrate are visible at high elevations in wave-exposed habitats. We conducted a multiannual study to investigate if small-scale barnacle recruitment could be predicted from the density of pre-existing adult barnacles. In a year that exhibited a wide adult density range (ca. 0-130 individuals/dm2), the relationship between adult density and recruit density (scaled to the available area for recruitment, which excluded adult barnacles) was unimodal. In years that exhibited a lower adult density range (ca. 0-40/50 individuals/dm2), the relationship between adult and recruit density was positive and resembled the lower half of the unimodal relationship. Overall, adult barnacle density was able to explain 26-40% of the observed variation in recruit density. The unimodal adult-recruit relationship is consistent with previously documented intraspecific interactions. Between low and intermediate adult densities, the positive nature of the relationship relates to the previously documented fact that settlement-seeking larvae are chemically and visually attracted to adults, which might be important for local population persistence. Between intermediate and high adult densities, where population persistence may be less compromised and the abundant adults may limit recruit growth and survival, the negative nature of the relationship suggests that adult barnacles at increasingly high densities stimulate larvae to settle elsewhere. The unimodal pattern may be especially common on shores with moderate rates of larval supply to the shore, because high rates of larval supply may swamp the coast with settlers, decoupling recruit density ...
format Other/Unknown Material
author Scrosati, Ricardo Augusto
Ellrich, Julius A.
spellingShingle Scrosati, Ricardo Augusto
Ellrich, Julius A.
Barnacle recruit-adult relationship (full paper published in 2017 in PeerJ 5: article e3444)
author_facet Scrosati, Ricardo Augusto
Ellrich, Julius A.
author_sort Scrosati, Ricardo Augusto
title Barnacle recruit-adult relationship (full paper published in 2017 in PeerJ 5: article e3444)
title_short Barnacle recruit-adult relationship (full paper published in 2017 in PeerJ 5: article e3444)
title_full Barnacle recruit-adult relationship (full paper published in 2017 in PeerJ 5: article e3444)
title_fullStr Barnacle recruit-adult relationship (full paper published in 2017 in PeerJ 5: article e3444)
title_full_unstemmed Barnacle recruit-adult relationship (full paper published in 2017 in PeerJ 5: article e3444)
title_sort barnacle recruit-adult relationship (full paper published in 2017 in peerj 5: article e3444)
publisher Center for Open Science
publishDate 2017
url http://dx.doi.org/10.31230/osf.io/mvp6w
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
op_doi https://doi.org/10.31230/osf.io/mvp6w
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