A brown tide caused by a very dense bloom of an as yet undescribed species of the new class Pelagophyceae was first reported in upper Laguna Madre, Texas, USA, in June 1990 and has been there continuously through December 1995. No change in response to reduced light was evident in the distribution of the seagrass Halodulewrightii along transects sampled before the brown tide in 1988 and resampled after initiation of the brown tide in 1991 and 1992; however, in winter 1993-94 losses were documented over 2.6 km2 of bottom and by winter 1994-95 the area of vegetation lost had more than tripled to 9.4 km2. Changes in biomass presaged the changes in distribution. Decreases in biomass at depths >1.4 m were evident 2 yr before bare areas were detected. Reductions in biomass were more pronounced toward the south, in keeping with a gradient of increasing light attenuation from north to south. Support of a diminishing number of new shoots by reclamation of nutrients and stored reserves from senescing shoots and rhizomes may allow H.wrightii to persist under conditions of insufficient light for periods greatly in excess of the life span of any one shoot. This postulated capability would account for the pattern of diminishing biomass over time where the seagrass persists in deeper areas and the long lag between light reduction and change in distribution where the seagrass succumbed.
Distribution . Biomass . Seagrass . Halodulewrightii . Light . Irradiance . PAR . Brown tide . Subtropical . Texas
Full text in pdf format |
Previous article Next article |