[Reference cited below are from Dell et al (2016) Plos One.]
Study site and species:
This study was conducted between January and May in 2013 and 2015 on the coral coast of Fiji’s main island, Viti Levu, in the villages of Votua and Vatu-o-lailai (18°12’32S, 177°42’00E and 18°12’13S, 177°41’29E respectively; Fig 1). These villages are ~3km apart and each has jurisdiction over their stretch of reef flat; a habitat ranging between ~1.5 and 3m deep at high tide and between ~0 and 1.5m deep at low tide. In 2002, these villages established small areas (0.8km2 in Votua and 0.5 km2 in Vatu-o-lailai; Fig 1) as no-take MPAs [25]. Though MPA and non-MPA areas were initially similar in coral and macroalgal cover (33-42% macroalgal cover; 3-12% coral cover [25]), MPAs now differ significantly from the adjacent non-MPAs in benthic cover and fish diversity and abundance. MPAs now have ~56% live coral cover on hard substrate, ~2% macroalgal cover, ~8 fold higher biomass of herbivorous fishes, and higher recruitment of both fishes and corals than the non-MPAs [5,22]. Meanwhile the non-MPAs have lower fish biomass, 5-16% live coral cover on hard substrates and 51-92% macroalgal cover, the majority of which is comprised by Phaeophytes (primarily Sargassum polycystum C. Agardh [22]). In the MPAs, macroalgal cover is restricted to the shallowest, most shoreward areas (where access by herbivorous fishes appears limited), whereas macroalgal cover in the non-MPAs extends throughout the habitat. Thus, over distances of only a few hundred metres, there are dramatic differences in community composition that may impact the efficacy of factors controlling macroalgal populations, without the confounding factors of great differences in space or time.
Effect of habitat and origin on the survival and growth of recruit-sized S. polycystum fronds
Small S. polycystum ramets ~1cm long (range between 0.5cm and 1.5cm) were collected from both the MPA and non-MPA using a nail and hammer so that a small piece of bedrock remained attached to each alga’s holdfast, allowing four ramets from either the MPA or the non-MPA to be affixed to ~25cm2 tiles by attaching the rock pieces using aquarium glue (Ecotech Marine, USA). The ramets were selected so that the four on each tile were of equal origin and size and were arranged in a square pattern 1cm distance from each other. The tiles were placed in coolers, containing a few centimetres of seawater and left for 12 hours in the shade to allow the glue to set before moving the tiles to the reef. The tiles were paired so the MPA and non-MPA ramets were of equal size and one tile of each was affixed in a cage so they were 30cm from each other.
These cages were either complete, so the ramets would be protected from fish grazing, or open-sided, so the ramets would be exposed to fish grazing. The open cages lacked the 2 walls parallel to the current direction so that fish access was permitted, while cage effects on flow and shading would be as similar as possible between treatments. The base of each cage was 0.75m x 0.75m, the height was 0.75m and the mesh size was 1cm2 thus excluding all but the smallest fishes and invertebrates. Ten replicates of each treatment were distributed in Votua’s MPA and 10 in Votua’s non-MPA so that the complete and open cages were paired and the cages in each pair were about one metre apart, while the distance between pairs was ≥ two metres. These cages were distributed ~25 to 50m from shore at a depth of ~1 to 1.5m at low tide.
The experiment was established mid- January 2013, ran for 4 months (112 days), and was checked for ramet mortality every 3 days for the first month and then every week. If an alga was missing but the stone remained, this was noted as mortality. If the stone was also missing this could have been due to failure of the glue, dislodgement by turbulence, or some unknown agent, so we recorded these as ‘lost’ and excluded them from analysis. Only ten ramets (3.1%) were lost which reduced the total number of ramets in the experiment from 320 to 310.
Despite running for four months and being checked at intervals of 3-7 days throughout this period, we could detect no growth in this experiment so we report only mean duration of survival. Duration of survival was calculated as the average number of days survived by the four MPA ramets and by the four non-MPA ramets in each cage, giving n=10 for each treatment in each habitat. Difference scores (mean survival duration for MPA versus non-MPA sub-samples in each replicate) were normally distributed (p≥0.200; Shapiro-Wilk) so the effect of origin was analysed by paired t-test run separately for each treatment in each location.