4.5 Article

Biomechanical consequences of epiphytism in intertidal macroalgae

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 217, Issue 7, Pages 1167-1174

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.088955

Keywords

Epiphyte; Host; Soranthera ulvoidea; Odonthalia floccosa; Biomechanics; Drag; Seaweed; Algae; Intertidal

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council

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Epiphytic algae grow on other algae rather than hard substrata, perhaps circumventing competition for space in marine ecosystems. Aquatic epiphytes are widely thought to negatively affect host fitness; it is also possible that epiphytes benefit from associating with hosts. This study explored the biomechanical costs and benefits of the epiphytic association between the intertidal brown algal epiphyte Soranthera ulvoidea and its red algal host Odonthalia floccosa. Drag on epiphytized and unepiphytized hosts was measured in a recirculating water flume. A typical epiphyte load increased drag on hosts by similar to 50%, increasing dislodgment risk of epiphytized hosts compared with hosts that did not have epiphytes. However, epiphytes were more likely to dislodge from hosts than hosts were to dislodge from the substratum, suggesting that drag added by epiphytes may not be mechanically harmful to hosts if epiphytes break first. Concomitantly, epiphytes experienced reduced flow when attached to hosts, perhaps allowing them to grow larger or live in more wave-exposed areas. Biomechanical interactions between algal epiphytes and hosts are complex and not necessarily negative, which may partially explain the evolution and persistence of epiphytic relationships.

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