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Invasive Species Alters Marine Community, Interferes in Post-Disaster Recovery

Clavelina oblonga, an invasive marine fouling species, not only reduces diversity in communities it invades, it also interferes in their recovery following natural disasters -- a process known as "succession."

Succession refers to how an ecosystem recovers after a disturbance or natural disaster -- does the system come back more or less the same as it was in terms of species composition, or is it different?

"The classic example of succession is a forest that experiences a wildfire," says Kayla Christianson, former NC State graduate student and first author of a paper describing the research. "As the community recovers from the fire, it proceeds through a predictable pattern of community development -- starting with grasses and ending with trees and a mature forest.

This predictable order of succession is due mainly to the seed bank beneath the soil, which allows the community to recover regardless of when the disturbance occurs."

However, marine fouling communities don't follow the same pattern as terrestrial ecosystems. Marine fouling species are invertebrate filter-feeding organisms -- like barnacles or mussels -- that settle on hard substrates, like docks, pilings, or ship hulls. Soft-bodied tunicates such as the invasive C. oblonga are also fouling species.

"Marine fouling environments are different because different species of larvae are present at different times of the year, so what the ecosystem looks like after a disturbance depends on when it occurs," says David Eggleston, professor of marine, earth and atmospheric sciences at North Carolina State University and corresponding author of the research. "For marine species, disturbances enhance community diversity."

Given the recent introduction and proliferation of C. oblonga along the North Carolina coast, Eggleston and Christianson wanted to see how this invasive species would affect succession in a fouling environment.

Christianson and Eggleston duplicated succession experiments performed 50 years ago in Beaufort, N.C. They submerged terra cotta settlement plates every four weeks from May 2017 to September 2018 along the docks and observed the communities that settled there.

Over the course of the study, 22 different fouling species settled on the plates. But in each case, when C. oblonga settled, they rapidly crowded out the other species. The study period also included an unseasonably cold winter, as well as landfall from Hurricane Florence in September 2018, enabling the researchers to look at succession after a natural disturbance. While both the cold and the hurricane succeeded in removing C. oblonga, it quickly regrew and crowded out other species, eliminating species diversity.

"In retesting succession theory we found that it holds in the absence of invasive species but not in their presence," Eggleston says. "For these fouling species, regardless of when a disturbance occurs, the community always reverts back to the invasive species.

"C. oblonga has only been here since 2015, but it seems to have no real natural predators, it crowds out native species and it has a foothold. We will have to monitor this species and be sure that it doesn't impact our local shellfish industry."

By Tracey Peake, North Carolina State University

Journal Reference

Kayla A. Christianson, David B. Eggleston. Testing ecological theories in the Anthropocene: alteration of succession by an invasive marine speciesEcosphere, 2021; 12 (4) DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.3471

The research was supported by North Carolina Sea Grant (grant R12-HCE-2) and the National Science Foundation (grant OCE-1155609).

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