We quantified the percentage cover of turfing algae among locations spanning >1000 km of continuous south Australian coastline and found that they formed one of the most extensive subtidal habitats on rocky reefs devoid of macroalgae. We then experimentally tested the hypothesis that sediment deposition and microtopography of substratum interact to control their abundance (percentage cover and biomass). Both microtopography (topographically simple and complex) and sedimentation (natural and reduced) were manipulated orthogonally to test their independent and interactive effects on subtidal turfing algae. This field experiment demonstrates that reduced rates of sedimentation have positive effects on the percentage cover and biomass of turfing algae (Feldmannia spp.), and that a very small increase in topographic complexity (microtopography) can have large positive effects (>36 % increase) on the biomass of turfing algae under conditions of reduced sedimentation. These results support new models that suggest differences in microtopography may account for observed variation in the effects of sedimentation on the abundance of turfing algae. Importantly, heavy rates of sediment deposition can negate the positive effects of greater topographic complexity at fine spatial scales (i.e. microtopography). These results raise serious concerns about gaps in our knowledge of the effects of sedimentation on turfing algae and its consequences for current declines in the diversity and cover of algae in disturbed coastal habitats.
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)