TY - JOUR
T1 - Variable effects of substrate colour and microtexture on sessile marine taxa in Australian estuaries
AU - Schaefer, Nina
AU - Bishop, Melanie J.
AU - Bugnot, Ana B.
AU - Herbert, Brett
AU - Hoey, Andrew S.
AU - Mayer-Pinto, Mariana
AU - Sherman, Craig D. H.
AU - Foster-Thorpe, Cian
AU - Vozzo, Maria L.
AU - Dafforn, Katherine A.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Concrete infrastructure in coastal waters is increasing. While adding complex habitat and manipulating concrete mixtures to enhance biodiversity have been studied, field investigations of sub-millimetre-scale complexity and substrate colour are lacking. Here, the interacting effects of ‘colour’ (white, grey, black) and ‘microtexture’ (smooth, 0.5 mm texture) on colonisation were assessed at three sites in Australia. In Townsville, no effects of colour or microtexture were observed. In Sydney, spirorbid polychaetes occupied more space on smooth than textured tiles, but there was no effect of microtexture on serpulid polychaetes, bryozoans and algae. In Melbourne, barnacles were more abundant on black than white tiles, while serpulid polychaetes showed opposite patterns and ascidians did not vary with treatments. These results suggest that microtexture and colour can facilitate colonisation of some taxa. The context-dependency of the results shows that inclusion of these factors into marine infrastructure designs needs to be carefully considered.
AB - Concrete infrastructure in coastal waters is increasing. While adding complex habitat and manipulating concrete mixtures to enhance biodiversity have been studied, field investigations of sub-millimetre-scale complexity and substrate colour are lacking. Here, the interacting effects of ‘colour’ (white, grey, black) and ‘microtexture’ (smooth, 0.5 mm texture) on colonisation were assessed at three sites in Australia. In Townsville, no effects of colour or microtexture were observed. In Sydney, spirorbid polychaetes occupied more space on smooth than textured tiles, but there was no effect of microtexture on serpulid polychaetes, bryozoans and algae. In Melbourne, barnacles were more abundant on black than white tiles, while serpulid polychaetes showed opposite patterns and ascidians did not vary with treatments. These results suggest that microtexture and colour can facilitate colonisation of some taxa. The context-dependency of the results shows that inclusion of these factors into marine infrastructure designs needs to be carefully considered.
KW - complexity
KW - Ecological engineering
KW - sessile species
KW - temperate
KW - tropics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85188534178&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/08927014.2024.2332710
DO - 10.1080/08927014.2024.2332710
M3 - Article
C2 - 38526167
SN - 0892-7014
VL - 40
SP - 223
EP - 234
JO - Biofouling
JF - Biofouling
IS - 2
ER -