Local and geographic variation in grazing intensity by herbivorous crabs in SW Atlantic salt marshes

Coupling experiments at small spatial scales with large-scale surveys can help to generalize experimental results across large spatial scales. The goal of the present study was to evaluate patterns of crab herbivory within and, at a larger scale, between many southwestern (SW) Atlantic salt marshes....

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Autores principales: Alberti, J., Escapa, M., Daleo, P., Iribarne, O., Silliman, B., Bertness, M.
Formato: JOUR
Lenguaje:English
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01718630_v349_n_p235_Alberti
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spelling todo:paper_01718630_v349_n_p235_Alberti2023-10-03T15:07:32Z Local and geographic variation in grazing intensity by herbivorous crabs in SW Atlantic salt marshes Alberti, J. Escapa, M. Daleo, P. Iribarne, O. Silliman, B. Bertness, M. Atlantic Chasmagnathus granulatus Herbivory Salt marshes Spartina SW crab geographical variation grass grazing pressure herbivore herbivory mortality saltmarsh Argentina Atlantic Ocean Atlantic Ocean (Southwest) Brazil South America Chasmagnathus granulata Decapoda (Crustacea) Hymenachne Spartina Spartina alterniflora Spartina densiflora Coupling experiments at small spatial scales with large-scale surveys can help to generalize experimental results across large spatial scales. The goal of the present study was to evaluate patterns of crab herbivory within and, at a larger scale, between many southwestern (SW) Atlantic salt marshes. Hence, we conducted experiments in an Argentinean salt marsh to elucidate the effects of crab Chasmagnathus granulatus grazing on the cordgrass Spartina densiflora and the factors that can affect this interaction, and then examined the potential generality of these results across SW Atlantic salt marshes from Brazil to Argentina (15 marshes, range ≈ 2000 km). Experimental examination of the effects of crabs (control and exclusion) on marsh grass transplants, and factors that can affect them, i.e. the presence or absence of plant neighbors and marsh height (middle and low), revealed that crab herbivory decreased plant biomass and increased stem mortality; however, herbivory effects were significantly diminished in the presence of plant neighbors and with increasing marsh elevation. Our geographical survey showed that crab herbivory is common in SW Atlantic salt marshes, with more than 20 % of leaves damaged in most marshes and with greater consumption at marshes with higher crab densities. In addition, plants at the lower edge of marshes were generally the most consumed (max. >60 % leaves consumed) and crabs preferred S. alterniflora over S. densiflora. Over a regional spatial scale, our results suggest that herbivory may affect plant production at some marshes and can also play a role in limiting the lower tidal elevation limit of low-marsh plants. © Inter-Research 2007. JOUR English info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01718630_v349_n_p235_Alberti
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
language English
orig_language_str_mv English
topic Atlantic
Chasmagnathus granulatus
Herbivory
Salt marshes
Spartina
SW
crab
geographical variation
grass
grazing pressure
herbivore
herbivory
mortality
saltmarsh
Argentina
Atlantic Ocean
Atlantic Ocean (Southwest)
Brazil
South America
Chasmagnathus granulata
Decapoda (Crustacea)
Hymenachne
Spartina
Spartina alterniflora
Spartina densiflora
spellingShingle Atlantic
Chasmagnathus granulatus
Herbivory
Salt marshes
Spartina
SW
crab
geographical variation
grass
grazing pressure
herbivore
herbivory
mortality
saltmarsh
Argentina
Atlantic Ocean
Atlantic Ocean (Southwest)
Brazil
South America
Chasmagnathus granulata
Decapoda (Crustacea)
Hymenachne
Spartina
Spartina alterniflora
Spartina densiflora
Alberti, J.
Escapa, M.
Daleo, P.
Iribarne, O.
Silliman, B.
Bertness, M.
Local and geographic variation in grazing intensity by herbivorous crabs in SW Atlantic salt marshes
topic_facet Atlantic
Chasmagnathus granulatus
Herbivory
Salt marshes
Spartina
SW
crab
geographical variation
grass
grazing pressure
herbivore
herbivory
mortality
saltmarsh
Argentina
Atlantic Ocean
Atlantic Ocean (Southwest)
Brazil
South America
Chasmagnathus granulata
Decapoda (Crustacea)
Hymenachne
Spartina
Spartina alterniflora
Spartina densiflora
description Coupling experiments at small spatial scales with large-scale surveys can help to generalize experimental results across large spatial scales. The goal of the present study was to evaluate patterns of crab herbivory within and, at a larger scale, between many southwestern (SW) Atlantic salt marshes. Hence, we conducted experiments in an Argentinean salt marsh to elucidate the effects of crab Chasmagnathus granulatus grazing on the cordgrass Spartina densiflora and the factors that can affect this interaction, and then examined the potential generality of these results across SW Atlantic salt marshes from Brazil to Argentina (15 marshes, range ≈ 2000 km). Experimental examination of the effects of crabs (control and exclusion) on marsh grass transplants, and factors that can affect them, i.e. the presence or absence of plant neighbors and marsh height (middle and low), revealed that crab herbivory decreased plant biomass and increased stem mortality; however, herbivory effects were significantly diminished in the presence of plant neighbors and with increasing marsh elevation. Our geographical survey showed that crab herbivory is common in SW Atlantic salt marshes, with more than 20 % of leaves damaged in most marshes and with greater consumption at marshes with higher crab densities. In addition, plants at the lower edge of marshes were generally the most consumed (max. >60 % leaves consumed) and crabs preferred S. alterniflora over S. densiflora. Over a regional spatial scale, our results suggest that herbivory may affect plant production at some marshes and can also play a role in limiting the lower tidal elevation limit of low-marsh plants. © Inter-Research 2007.
format JOUR
author Alberti, J.
Escapa, M.
Daleo, P.
Iribarne, O.
Silliman, B.
Bertness, M.
author_facet Alberti, J.
Escapa, M.
Daleo, P.
Iribarne, O.
Silliman, B.
Bertness, M.
author_sort Alberti, J.
title Local and geographic variation in grazing intensity by herbivorous crabs in SW Atlantic salt marshes
title_short Local and geographic variation in grazing intensity by herbivorous crabs in SW Atlantic salt marshes
title_full Local and geographic variation in grazing intensity by herbivorous crabs in SW Atlantic salt marshes
title_fullStr Local and geographic variation in grazing intensity by herbivorous crabs in SW Atlantic salt marshes
title_full_unstemmed Local and geographic variation in grazing intensity by herbivorous crabs in SW Atlantic salt marshes
title_sort local and geographic variation in grazing intensity by herbivorous crabs in sw atlantic salt marshes
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01718630_v349_n_p235_Alberti
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AT daleop localandgeographicvariationingrazingintensitybyherbivorouscrabsinswatlanticsaltmarshes
AT iribarneo localandgeographicvariationingrazingintensitybyherbivorouscrabsinswatlanticsaltmarshes
AT sillimanb localandgeographicvariationingrazingintensitybyherbivorouscrabsinswatlanticsaltmarshes
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