Dka. Barnes, SEASONAL AND ANNUAL GROWTH IN ERECT SPECIES OF ANTARCTIC BRYOZOANS, Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology, 188(2), 1995, pp. 181-198
Seasonal and annual growth was monitored in situ at Signy Island in tw
o species of bryozoan of different growth morphologies, using photogra
phic and tagging techniques. Cellarinella watersi, a heavily calcified
species, exhibited marked seasonality of zooidal production, leading
to the formation of annual skeletal growth check lines. These growth c
hecks allowed colony age to be determined, and individual colony growt
h history to be studied. Alloeflustra tenuis appeared to grow without
obvious seasonality, despite seasonal variation in many environmental
factors, to a maximum age of about 26 yr old. The amount of organic gr
owth (ash-free dry mass) per year, was very similar in these two speci
es, although there were large differences in dry mass because of diffe
rences in skeletal investment. Cellarinella watersi produced comparabl
e annual dry mass to an erect temperate bryozoan species, whereas A. t
enuis produced much less. Nematoflustra flagellata, similar in morphol
ogy to A. tenuis, was monitored for a single summer only. It grew much
faster than A. tenuis, reaching a much larger size at similar maximum
age; its summer growth rate was comparable with the temperate species
Flustra foliacea. The maximum size obtained by the rigidly erect Cell
arinella watersi in shallow waters appeared to be limited by current d
amage. It is possible that in all these bryozoans, maximum age (and si
ze) is limited in the long term by frequency of iceberg impact. These
bryozoans provide a first insight into the growth of Antarctic colonia
l suspension feeders, which dominate many of the dense benthic faunal
assemblages known around Antarctica.