Stationary substrates facilitate bioinvasion in Paranaguá Bay in southern Brazil

Artificial substrates in and near ports and marinas commonly have many non-indigenous species and are the first stepping stone for the establishment of bioinvasors. Substrate movement influences fouling communities and so understanding of how species assemblages are related to specific substrate conditions is crucial as a management tool. Here we describe the species assemblage of the community after six months of development on granite plates in Paranaguá Bay. Species richness was similar in the two treatments, with 12 species on floating (constant depth) plates and 15 on stationary (variable depth) plates. However, species composition differed, with the community on floating plates being dominated by the native bivalve Mytella charruana (66.1 ± 5.5% cover) and that on stationary plates dominated by the barnacles Fistulobalanus citerosum (49.8 ± 3.5% cover) and the introduced Amphibalanus reticulatus (33.9 ± 3.7% cover). Other introduced species were Garveia franciscana, on one stationary plate, and Megabalanus coccopoma also on one stationary plate and not very abundant on half of the floating plates (< 2%). Thus, stationary plates were more susceptible to introduced species that may become very abundant, suggesting that this type of substrate should be a priority in management for bioinvasion control. We also hypothesize that the native bivalve M. charruana is the dominant competitor for space on floating substrates, thereby reducing the invasiveness of that type of substrate.

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Main Authors: Rocha,Rosana M., Cangussu,Leonardo C., Braga,Mariana P.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidade de São Paulo, Instituto Oceanográfico 2010
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1679-87592010000700004
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spelling oai:scielo:S1679-875920100007000042010-08-31Stationary substrates facilitate bioinvasion in Paranaguá Bay in southern BrazilRocha,Rosana M.Cangussu,Leonardo C.Braga,Mariana P. bioinvasion artificial substrate estuary fouling exotic species Artificial substrates in and near ports and marinas commonly have many non-indigenous species and are the first stepping stone for the establishment of bioinvasors. Substrate movement influences fouling communities and so understanding of how species assemblages are related to specific substrate conditions is crucial as a management tool. Here we describe the species assemblage of the community after six months of development on granite plates in Paranaguá Bay. Species richness was similar in the two treatments, with 12 species on floating (constant depth) plates and 15 on stationary (variable depth) plates. However, species composition differed, with the community on floating plates being dominated by the native bivalve Mytella charruana (66.1 ± 5.5% cover) and that on stationary plates dominated by the barnacles Fistulobalanus citerosum (49.8 ± 3.5% cover) and the introduced Amphibalanus reticulatus (33.9 ± 3.7% cover). Other introduced species were Garveia franciscana, on one stationary plate, and Megabalanus coccopoma also on one stationary plate and not very abundant on half of the floating plates (< 2%). Thus, stationary plates were more susceptible to introduced species that may become very abundant, suggesting that this type of substrate should be a priority in management for bioinvasion control. We also hypothesize that the native bivalve M. charruana is the dominant competitor for space on floating substrates, thereby reducing the invasiveness of that type of substrate.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessUniversidade de São Paulo, Instituto OceanográficoBrazilian Journal of Oceanography v.58 n.spe3 20102010-06-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1679-87592010000700004en10.1590/S1679-87592010000700004
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Rocha,Rosana M.
Cangussu,Leonardo C.
Braga,Mariana P.
spellingShingle Rocha,Rosana M.
Cangussu,Leonardo C.
Braga,Mariana P.
Stationary substrates facilitate bioinvasion in Paranaguá Bay in southern Brazil
author_facet Rocha,Rosana M.
Cangussu,Leonardo C.
Braga,Mariana P.
author_sort Rocha,Rosana M.
title Stationary substrates facilitate bioinvasion in Paranaguá Bay in southern Brazil
title_short Stationary substrates facilitate bioinvasion in Paranaguá Bay in southern Brazil
title_full Stationary substrates facilitate bioinvasion in Paranaguá Bay in southern Brazil
title_fullStr Stationary substrates facilitate bioinvasion in Paranaguá Bay in southern Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Stationary substrates facilitate bioinvasion in Paranaguá Bay in southern Brazil
title_sort stationary substrates facilitate bioinvasion in paranaguá bay in southern brazil
description Artificial substrates in and near ports and marinas commonly have many non-indigenous species and are the first stepping stone for the establishment of bioinvasors. Substrate movement influences fouling communities and so understanding of how species assemblages are related to specific substrate conditions is crucial as a management tool. Here we describe the species assemblage of the community after six months of development on granite plates in Paranaguá Bay. Species richness was similar in the two treatments, with 12 species on floating (constant depth) plates and 15 on stationary (variable depth) plates. However, species composition differed, with the community on floating plates being dominated by the native bivalve Mytella charruana (66.1 ± 5.5% cover) and that on stationary plates dominated by the barnacles Fistulobalanus citerosum (49.8 ± 3.5% cover) and the introduced Amphibalanus reticulatus (33.9 ± 3.7% cover). Other introduced species were Garveia franciscana, on one stationary plate, and Megabalanus coccopoma also on one stationary plate and not very abundant on half of the floating plates (< 2%). Thus, stationary plates were more susceptible to introduced species that may become very abundant, suggesting that this type of substrate should be a priority in management for bioinvasion control. We also hypothesize that the native bivalve M. charruana is the dominant competitor for space on floating substrates, thereby reducing the invasiveness of that type of substrate.
publisher Universidade de São Paulo, Instituto Oceanográfico
publishDate 2010
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1679-87592010000700004
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