The persistence of seagrass meadows reflects variation in factors that influence their productivity and consumption. Sea urchins (Amblypneustes pallidus) can over-graze seagrass (Amphibolis antarctica) to create sparse meadows in South Australia, but this effect is not observed in adjacent Posidonia sinuosa meadows despite greater densities of inhabiting urchins. To test the effect of urchin grazing on seagrass biomass, we elevated the density of urchins in meadows of A. antarctica and P. sinuosa and quantified seagrass decline. Urchins removed similar amounts of biomass from both seagrass species, but the loss of leaf meristems was 11-times greater in A. antarctica than in P. sinuosa. In a second experiment to assess the recovery of seagra...
Climate change is affecting herbivore distributions and abundance, resulting in intensified grazing ...
Identifying the major drivers of ecosystem change remains a central area of ecological research. Alt...
In recent decades there has been a concerning trend of loss of kelp beds to sea urchin ‘barrens’ as ...
Human beings can modify the abiotic conditions and biotic interactions that shape natural ecosystems...
Herbivore grazing is a well-documented cause of habitat decline in terrestrial systems, but marine e...
The sea urchin Lytechinus variegatus is a known grazer of the seagrass Thalassia testudinum, and has...
Habitat structure plays an important mediating role in predator-prey interactions. However the effec...
Herbivore outbreaks often trigger catastrophic overgrazing events in marine macrophyte ecosystems. T...
While chemical defenses can determine plant persistence in terrestrial ecosystems and some marine ma...
A pronounced, widespread and persistent regime shift among marine ecosystems is observable on temper...
and recovery following catastrophic grazing: studies of a successional chronosequence in a seagrass ...
Multiple anthropogenic stressors are causing a global decline in foundation species, including macro...
Human modification of the abiotic environment can cause profound change to biological communities, y...
1. Understanding the factors that influence habitat persistence is a central theme in ecology, parti...
Few field studies have investigated how changes at one trophic level can affect the invasibility of ...
Climate change is affecting herbivore distributions and abundance, resulting in intensified grazing ...
Identifying the major drivers of ecosystem change remains a central area of ecological research. Alt...
In recent decades there has been a concerning trend of loss of kelp beds to sea urchin ‘barrens’ as ...
Human beings can modify the abiotic conditions and biotic interactions that shape natural ecosystems...
Herbivore grazing is a well-documented cause of habitat decline in terrestrial systems, but marine e...
The sea urchin Lytechinus variegatus is a known grazer of the seagrass Thalassia testudinum, and has...
Habitat structure plays an important mediating role in predator-prey interactions. However the effec...
Herbivore outbreaks often trigger catastrophic overgrazing events in marine macrophyte ecosystems. T...
While chemical defenses can determine plant persistence in terrestrial ecosystems and some marine ma...
A pronounced, widespread and persistent regime shift among marine ecosystems is observable on temper...
and recovery following catastrophic grazing: studies of a successional chronosequence in a seagrass ...
Multiple anthropogenic stressors are causing a global decline in foundation species, including macro...
Human modification of the abiotic environment can cause profound change to biological communities, y...
1. Understanding the factors that influence habitat persistence is a central theme in ecology, parti...
Few field studies have investigated how changes at one trophic level can affect the invasibility of ...
Climate change is affecting herbivore distributions and abundance, resulting in intensified grazing ...
Identifying the major drivers of ecosystem change remains a central area of ecological research. Alt...
In recent decades there has been a concerning trend of loss of kelp beds to sea urchin ‘barrens’ as ...