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An assessment of seaweed decomposition within a southern Strait of Georgia seaweed community
Authors:B D Smith  R E Foreman
Institution:(1) Department of Botany, The University of British Columbia, V6T 1W5 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;(2) Present address: Institute of Animal Resource Ecology, The University of British Columbia, 2204 Main Mall, V6T 1W5 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;(3) Present address: Bamfield Marine Station, V0R 1B0 Bamfield, British Columbia, Canada
Abstract:An assessment of litter and detritus decomposition and nitrogen content of decomposing litter is presented for ten important seaweeds within a southern Strait of Georgia (British Columbia, Canada) seaweed community sampled from August 1975 until October 1976. Litter decomposition rates varied among species with the time required for litter to disappear from litter bags ranging from 6 d for the lamina of Nereocystis luetkeana to about 70 d for Fucus distichus. Decomposition was characterized by an accelerating increase in the nitrogen: dry weight ratio of remnant litter as decomposition proceeded. Iridaea cordata detritus decomposed most rapidly, at 5.7% d-1, while rates for Gigartina papillata, N. luetkeana, Laminaria saccharina and Laminaria groenlandica ranged from 1.8 to 3.6% d-1. The remaining species decomposed more slowly. There was a tendency toward more rapid decomposition with decreasing crude fibre content and detritus particle size; however, it appears that morphology, habitat and growth rate are also correlated with relative decomposition rates. Of 43 taxa identified within quantitative litter collections, F. distichus (41%), I. cordata (26%), N. luetkeana (27%) and Laminaria spp. (4%) accounted for 98% of total deposition with mean peak accumulation occurring in August and September from a low near zero in January and February. Litter distribution was patchy, with most litter decomposing near its place of deposition. The application of litter decomposition rates to measured litter accumulation in a mathematical simulation of decomposition predicted the rate of seaweed litter decomposition to peak at about 1.1 g AFDW (ash-free dry weight) m-2 d-1 in early September from a mid-winter low near zero. In total, 56±4% of decomposing litter formed detritus, with the remainder being released as soluble matter. The annual contribution of seaweed litter biomass to detrital pathways from our study site was calculated to be 152 g AFDW m-2.
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