Vertical Distributions of Some Benthic Marine Algae in a British Columbia Inlet, as Related to Some Environmental Factors
- 1 January 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada
- Vol. 24 (1) , 33-46
- https://doi.org/10.1139/f67-004
Abstract
The vertical distribution of 12 benthic marine algae and one animal are described for Indian Arm, an inlet in British Columbia. In general, the vertical distributions had distinct limits and the relative vertical positions of the species were constant throughout the inlet. The relative vertical distributions of the biota within the inlet are essentially the same as described for the northeast Pacific by other authors concerned with the same biotic elements. However, the upper limits of Laminaria saccharina (L.) Lamouroux, Costaria costata (Turn.) Saunders, and Constantinea subulifera Setchell are from 1 to 3 m lower within the inlet than elsewhere, whereas those of Agarum cribosum Bory, Fucus evanescens C. Agardh, and Sargassum muticum (Yendo) Fensholt are essentially the same within and outside of the inlet. For the remaining species studied (Enteromorpha compressa (L.) Greville, E. linza (L.) J. Agardh, E. intestinalis (L.) Link, Monostroma fuscum (Postels & Ruprecht) Wittrock, Ulva lactuca Linnaeus, Navicula grevillei (C. Ag.) Cleve, and Balanus glandulus (Darwin)) there were no comparable distribution data outside of the inlet.Available data suggest the deepening of the upper limits of some algae in Indian Arm reflects their intolerance to the high temperature and low salinity of the surface waters of the inlet.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Survey of the Distribution of Intertidal Algae Along a Coast Transitional in Respect to Salinity and Tidal FactorsJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1965
- Life Between Tide-Marks in North America. IVB. Vancouver Island, IIJournal of Ecology, 1961
- Life Between Tide-Marks in North America: Vancouver Island, IJournal of Ecology, 1961
- Critical Tide Factors that are Correlated with the Vertical Distribution of Marine Algae and Other Organisms along the Pacific CoastEcology, 1946
- Geographic Elements of the Marine Flora of the North Pacific OceanThe American Naturalist, 1935