Ms. Foster et Gr. Vanblaricom, Spatial variation in kelp forest communities along the Big Sur coast of central California, USA, CRYPT ALGOL, 22(2), 2001, pp. 173-186
Giant kelp [Macrocystis pyrifera (Linnaeus) C. Agardh] forests are commonly
called a community, but their composition varies among sites and depths. W
hile numerous studies mention this variation and it is the descriptive basi
s for general models of kelp community structure, it has rarely been quanti
tatively assessed. We described kelp forest structure among four depths (6,
9, 12, and 15 m) at nine sites along 80 km of the relatively pristine Big
Sur coast of California. Density and cover of common organisms were assesse
d in replicate quadrats at each depth in each site. Macrocystis pyrifera fo
rmed a surface canopy at eight sites, and bull kelp, Nereocystis luetkeana
(Mertens) Postels & Ruprecht, at one site. The understory kelps Pterygophor
a californica Ruprecht and Laminaria setchellii P.C. Silva and the bat star
Asterina miniata Brandt were the most abundant organisms counted as indivi
duals. Geniculate and nongeniculate coralline algae and encrusting inverteb
rates had the highest cover. Abundances of giant kelp and the two understor
y kelps, and sessile invertebrates were significantly different among sites
, and differences in sessile invertebrate abundance suggest two general 'ty
pes' of kelp forests in the region; one with abundant understory kelps and
coralline algae and the other with an understory dominated by sessile inver
tebrates. Among the eight abundant taxa only the abundance of the two types
of coralline algae varied significantly among depths when all sites were c
ombined. Cluster analyses indicated two depth zones within these forests. (
C) 2001 Adac/Editions scientifiques et medicales Elsevier SAS.