By altering the phenotypic properties of their hosts, endolithic parasites can modulate the engin... more By altering the phenotypic properties of their hosts, endolithic parasites can modulate the engineering processes of marine ecosystem engineers. Here, we assessed the biogeographical patterns of species assemblages, prevalence and impact of endolithic parasitism in two mussel species that act as important ecosystem engineers in the southern African intertidal habitat, Perna perna and Mytilus galloprovincialis. We conducted large-scale surveys across three biogeographic regions along the South African coast: the subtropical east coast, dominated by the indigenous mussel, P. perna, the warm temperate south coast, where this species coexists with the invasive Mediterranean mussel, M. galloprovincialis, and the cool temperate west coast dominated by M. galloprovincialis. Infestation increased with mussel size, and in the case of M. galloprovincialis we found a significantly higher infestation in the cool temperate bioregion than the warm temperate region. For P. perna, the prevalence of...
Excessive use of plastics in daily life and the inappropriate disposal of plastic products are se... more Excessive use of plastics in daily life and the inappropriate disposal of plastic products are severely affecting wildlife species in both coastal and aquatic environments. Birds are top-predators, exposed to all threats affecting their environments, making them ideal sentinel organisms for monitoring ecosystems change. We set a baseline assessment of the prevalence of marine plastic litter affecting multi-species populations of aquatic birds in southern Portugal. By examining 160 stomach contents from 8 species of aquatic birds, we show that 22.5% were affected by plastic debris. Plastic was found in Ciconia ciconia, Larus fuscus and L. michahellis. Ciconia ciconia ingested the highest amount (number of items and total mass) of plastic debris. Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS, silicones) was the most abundant polymer and was recorded only in C. ciconia. Plastic ingestion baseline data are of crucial importance to evaluate changes through time and among regions and to define management an...
Thermal performance curves (TPCs) represent an increasingly popular tool in ecology for anticipat... more Thermal performance curves (TPCs) represent an increasingly popular tool in ecology for anticipating species responses to climate change. TPC theory has been developed using species that experience similar temperatures during activity and at rest and consequently exhibit thermal ranges for activity that closely coincide with their physiological thermal tolerances. Many species, however, experience other stressors, such as desiccation, that limit active behaviour at temperatures below the maximum values experienced. As a result, activity is constrained to a narrow thermal window that is a subset of the range of temperatures that can be tolerated physiologically. This results in a decoupling of behavioural and physiological TPCs that does not conform to the present paradigm. To test the generality of TPC theory, we measured thermal responses for behaviour (crawling speed) and physiological tolerance (heart rate) for six rocky shore gastropods spanning a thermal/desiccation stress grad...
Molecular phylogenetics and evolution, Dec 27, 2017
Southern Africa is a biodiversity hotspot of patellid limpets, with three genera (Helcion, Cymbul... more Southern Africa is a biodiversity hotspot of patellid limpets, with three genera (Helcion, Cymbula and Scutellastra) identified and described in the region. Scutellastra is the most diverse and most frequently studied of these and, along with Cymbula, includes species with territorial and non-territorial foraging behaviours. We used three mitochondrial markers (12S rRNA, 16S rRNA and COI) and one nuclear marker (ATPSβ intron) to assess evolutionary relationships among species of Cymbula and Scutellastra with these two foraging behaviours and to identify which foraging mode is the more ancient. Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian Inference phylogenetic analyses revealed that the species sharing a foraging type are monophyletic in both genera. Territoriality is a derived character, as the clades with this foraging type are nested within a tree that otherwise comprises non-territorial taxa. These include Helcion, which was recovered as sister to the Cymbula/Scutellastra clade, and the next...
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 2017
The availability of suitable microhabitats has emerged as a key requirement for maximising specie... more The availability of suitable microhabitats has emerged as a key requirement for maximising species diversity gains from ecological engineering of coastal habitats. This includes intertidal boulder field habitat, which is threatened by increasing urbanisation. We examined faunal use of microhabitats offered by natural intertidal boulders on two continents, South Africa and Australia, and then used artificial boulders to test possible mechanisms driving the observed patterns. Gaps often occur between the undersides of boulders and the substratum on which they lie. Substrata underneath boulders are generally uneven, so gaps can occur anywhere along the boulder undersurface, but gaps are generally larger near the edges of naturally-occurring boulders. Boulder edges were found to provide a microhabitat that had greater densities of almost all macrofauna than closer to the centre of boulder undersides. To test the model that microhabitat use of boulder edges reflects their larger gap sizes (relative to boulder centres), artificial boulders were constructed with the underside surface either flat, or with a gap underneath mimicking the mean size of the gap normally found only under boulder edges (when their average shape is considered among numerous naturally-occurring boulders). Artificial boulders were deployed intertidally for seven weeks, and macrofaunal colonisation was compared (a) between flat boulders and those with gaps, and (b) between edges and centres. Five times more macrofauna colonised boulders with artificial gaps, while no effect of proximity to edges was found when the gap-width was controlled for. The size of gaps under boulders appears to be an important microhabitat feature that can explain a widespread distributional pattern in the diverse assemblages of boulder fields. Such gaps are clearly used by numerous species, including some that are rare or commercially important. Provision and augmentation of this microhabitat should be considered for any ecological engineering project that involves intertidal or subtidal boulders
Variability in mesoscale nearshore oceanographic conditions plays an important role in the distri... more Variability in mesoscale nearshore oceanographic conditions plays an important role in the distribution of primary production and food availability for intertidal consumers. Advection of nutrient rich waters by upwelling usually allows the proliferation of diatoms, later replaced by dinoflagellates. We examined upwelling effects on the fatty acid (FA) signature of a benthic intertidal filter feeder to identify its response to pulsed variability in food availability. The study took place in two contrasting seasons and at two upwelling and two non-upwelling sites interspersed within the southern Benguela upwelling system of South Africa. We investigated the FA composition of the adductor muscles and gonads of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis to assess how FA are apportioned to the different tissues and whether this changes between upwelling and non-upwelling conditions. In situ temperature loggers used to identify upwelling conditions at the four sites indicated that such events o...
ABSTRACT Ecosystem dynamics driven by top-down controls have been well documented in rocky intert... more ABSTRACT Ecosystem dynamics driven by top-down controls have been well documented in rocky intertidal communities, while the effects of bottom-up influences are comparatively poorly understood. We hypothesized that large-scale signatures of the physical environment may be identifiable along the South African coastline as it is subject to two very different current systems (Benguela and Agulhas Currents) that profoundly influence primary production and thus both food type and availability. Through stable isotope analysis, we examined biogeographic patterns in multiple trophic levels at four sites along a 1400-km stretch of South African coastline and investigated the dietary role of macroalgal-derived organic carbon in rocky intertidal communities. The general positioning of trophic groups was comparable across all sites, with animals from the same trophic levels grouping together and with a δ15N fractionation of 1–2‰ between levels. The species found at all sites demonstrated east–west δ15N enrichment, presumably reflecting a biogeographic shift in nitrogen sources linked to upwelling on the west coast. Filter-feeders gave particularly clear results. Using discriminant analysis, mussels could be categorized into four geographic groups based on carbon and nitrogen signatures: east coast, southeast coast, south-west coast and west coast. Barnacles and polychaetes showed similar geographic groupings to mussels, but with shifts in actual values (1‰ depletion in δ13C and 3‰ enrichment in δ15N relative to mussels). This suggests that fractionation varies between species within a trophic level.IsoSource models showed that Ulva sp. made large contributions to the diets of two microalgal grazers (Siphonaria capensis and Scutellastra granularis) and this dietary dependence increased when moving from west to east coast, along the shoreline. Additionally, IsoSource models determined that relative to phytoplankton, macroalgae accounted for upwards of 60% of suspended particulate matter sampled from the shore (SPM; δ13C and δ15N) at three out of four sites and linear mixing models showed over 40% (all sites) and 50% (three sites) contribution of nearshore δ13C and δ15N, respectively, to the diet of all sampled filter feeders, inferring heavy dependence on macroalgal carbon. Numerous processes influence the stable isotope composition of algae, obscuring direct links between macroalgae and their consumers. In light of this, the clarity of the biogeographic patterns of filter feeders is remarkable and demonstrates a very strong signature of the physical environment in the intertidal community.
By altering the phenotypic properties of their hosts, endolithic parasites can modulate the engin... more By altering the phenotypic properties of their hosts, endolithic parasites can modulate the engineering processes of marine ecosystem engineers. Here, we assessed the biogeographical patterns of species assemblages, prevalence and impact of endolithic parasitism in two mussel species that act as important ecosystem engineers in the southern African intertidal habitat, Perna perna and Mytilus galloprovincialis. We conducted large-scale surveys across three biogeographic regions along the South African coast: the subtropical east coast, dominated by the indigenous mussel, P. perna, the warm temperate south coast, where this species coexists with the invasive Mediterranean mussel, M. galloprovincialis, and the cool temperate west coast dominated by M. galloprovincialis. Infestation increased with mussel size, and in the case of M. galloprovincialis we found a significantly higher infestation in the cool temperate bioregion than the warm temperate region. For P. perna, the prevalence of...
Excessive use of plastics in daily life and the inappropriate disposal of plastic products are se... more Excessive use of plastics in daily life and the inappropriate disposal of plastic products are severely affecting wildlife species in both coastal and aquatic environments. Birds are top-predators, exposed to all threats affecting their environments, making them ideal sentinel organisms for monitoring ecosystems change. We set a baseline assessment of the prevalence of marine plastic litter affecting multi-species populations of aquatic birds in southern Portugal. By examining 160 stomach contents from 8 species of aquatic birds, we show that 22.5% were affected by plastic debris. Plastic was found in Ciconia ciconia, Larus fuscus and L. michahellis. Ciconia ciconia ingested the highest amount (number of items and total mass) of plastic debris. Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS, silicones) was the most abundant polymer and was recorded only in C. ciconia. Plastic ingestion baseline data are of crucial importance to evaluate changes through time and among regions and to define management an...
Thermal performance curves (TPCs) represent an increasingly popular tool in ecology for anticipat... more Thermal performance curves (TPCs) represent an increasingly popular tool in ecology for anticipating species responses to climate change. TPC theory has been developed using species that experience similar temperatures during activity and at rest and consequently exhibit thermal ranges for activity that closely coincide with their physiological thermal tolerances. Many species, however, experience other stressors, such as desiccation, that limit active behaviour at temperatures below the maximum values experienced. As a result, activity is constrained to a narrow thermal window that is a subset of the range of temperatures that can be tolerated physiologically. This results in a decoupling of behavioural and physiological TPCs that does not conform to the present paradigm. To test the generality of TPC theory, we measured thermal responses for behaviour (crawling speed) and physiological tolerance (heart rate) for six rocky shore gastropods spanning a thermal/desiccation stress grad...
Molecular phylogenetics and evolution, Dec 27, 2017
Southern Africa is a biodiversity hotspot of patellid limpets, with three genera (Helcion, Cymbul... more Southern Africa is a biodiversity hotspot of patellid limpets, with three genera (Helcion, Cymbula and Scutellastra) identified and described in the region. Scutellastra is the most diverse and most frequently studied of these and, along with Cymbula, includes species with territorial and non-territorial foraging behaviours. We used three mitochondrial markers (12S rRNA, 16S rRNA and COI) and one nuclear marker (ATPSβ intron) to assess evolutionary relationships among species of Cymbula and Scutellastra with these two foraging behaviours and to identify which foraging mode is the more ancient. Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian Inference phylogenetic analyses revealed that the species sharing a foraging type are monophyletic in both genera. Territoriality is a derived character, as the clades with this foraging type are nested within a tree that otherwise comprises non-territorial taxa. These include Helcion, which was recovered as sister to the Cymbula/Scutellastra clade, and the next...
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 2017
The availability of suitable microhabitats has emerged as a key requirement for maximising specie... more The availability of suitable microhabitats has emerged as a key requirement for maximising species diversity gains from ecological engineering of coastal habitats. This includes intertidal boulder field habitat, which is threatened by increasing urbanisation. We examined faunal use of microhabitats offered by natural intertidal boulders on two continents, South Africa and Australia, and then used artificial boulders to test possible mechanisms driving the observed patterns. Gaps often occur between the undersides of boulders and the substratum on which they lie. Substrata underneath boulders are generally uneven, so gaps can occur anywhere along the boulder undersurface, but gaps are generally larger near the edges of naturally-occurring boulders. Boulder edges were found to provide a microhabitat that had greater densities of almost all macrofauna than closer to the centre of boulder undersides. To test the model that microhabitat use of boulder edges reflects their larger gap sizes (relative to boulder centres), artificial boulders were constructed with the underside surface either flat, or with a gap underneath mimicking the mean size of the gap normally found only under boulder edges (when their average shape is considered among numerous naturally-occurring boulders). Artificial boulders were deployed intertidally for seven weeks, and macrofaunal colonisation was compared (a) between flat boulders and those with gaps, and (b) between edges and centres. Five times more macrofauna colonised boulders with artificial gaps, while no effect of proximity to edges was found when the gap-width was controlled for. The size of gaps under boulders appears to be an important microhabitat feature that can explain a widespread distributional pattern in the diverse assemblages of boulder fields. Such gaps are clearly used by numerous species, including some that are rare or commercially important. Provision and augmentation of this microhabitat should be considered for any ecological engineering project that involves intertidal or subtidal boulders
Variability in mesoscale nearshore oceanographic conditions plays an important role in the distri... more Variability in mesoscale nearshore oceanographic conditions plays an important role in the distribution of primary production and food availability for intertidal consumers. Advection of nutrient rich waters by upwelling usually allows the proliferation of diatoms, later replaced by dinoflagellates. We examined upwelling effects on the fatty acid (FA) signature of a benthic intertidal filter feeder to identify its response to pulsed variability in food availability. The study took place in two contrasting seasons and at two upwelling and two non-upwelling sites interspersed within the southern Benguela upwelling system of South Africa. We investigated the FA composition of the adductor muscles and gonads of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis to assess how FA are apportioned to the different tissues and whether this changes between upwelling and non-upwelling conditions. In situ temperature loggers used to identify upwelling conditions at the four sites indicated that such events o...
ABSTRACT Ecosystem dynamics driven by top-down controls have been well documented in rocky intert... more ABSTRACT Ecosystem dynamics driven by top-down controls have been well documented in rocky intertidal communities, while the effects of bottom-up influences are comparatively poorly understood. We hypothesized that large-scale signatures of the physical environment may be identifiable along the South African coastline as it is subject to two very different current systems (Benguela and Agulhas Currents) that profoundly influence primary production and thus both food type and availability. Through stable isotope analysis, we examined biogeographic patterns in multiple trophic levels at four sites along a 1400-km stretch of South African coastline and investigated the dietary role of macroalgal-derived organic carbon in rocky intertidal communities. The general positioning of trophic groups was comparable across all sites, with animals from the same trophic levels grouping together and with a δ15N fractionation of 1–2‰ between levels. The species found at all sites demonstrated east–west δ15N enrichment, presumably reflecting a biogeographic shift in nitrogen sources linked to upwelling on the west coast. Filter-feeders gave particularly clear results. Using discriminant analysis, mussels could be categorized into four geographic groups based on carbon and nitrogen signatures: east coast, southeast coast, south-west coast and west coast. Barnacles and polychaetes showed similar geographic groupings to mussels, but with shifts in actual values (1‰ depletion in δ13C and 3‰ enrichment in δ15N relative to mussels). This suggests that fractionation varies between species within a trophic level.IsoSource models showed that Ulva sp. made large contributions to the diets of two microalgal grazers (Siphonaria capensis and Scutellastra granularis) and this dietary dependence increased when moving from west to east coast, along the shoreline. Additionally, IsoSource models determined that relative to phytoplankton, macroalgae accounted for upwards of 60% of suspended particulate matter sampled from the shore (SPM; δ13C and δ15N) at three out of four sites and linear mixing models showed over 40% (all sites) and 50% (three sites) contribution of nearshore δ13C and δ15N, respectively, to the diet of all sampled filter feeders, inferring heavy dependence on macroalgal carbon. Numerous processes influence the stable isotope composition of algae, obscuring direct links between macroalgae and their consumers. In light of this, the clarity of the biogeographic patterns of filter feeders is remarkable and demonstrates a very strong signature of the physical environment in the intertidal community.
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Papers by Christopher McQuaid