2008
DOI: 10.3354/meps07526
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Recovering a lost baseline: missing kelp forests from a metropolitan coast

Abstract: There is concern about historical and continuing loss of canopy-forming algae across the world's temperate coastline. In South Australia, the sparse cover of canopy-forming algae on the Adelaide metropolitan coast has been of public concern with continuous years of anecdotal evidence culminating in 2 competing views. One view considers that current patterns existed before the onset of urbanisation, whereas the alternate view is that they developed after urbanisation. We tested hypotheses to distinguish between… Show more

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Cited by 297 publications
(246 citation statements)
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“…only nutrients and not CO 2 ), whereas their alternate state (characterized by turf algae) was co-limited by both nutrients and CO 2 . This difference in carbon limitation demonstrates the potential for elevated CO 2 to influence turf expansion [32], especially when amplified by human activities that also increase nutrient loads [33]. This response is characteristic of co-limitation by multiple resources [34].…”
Section: Carbon Dioxide As a Carbon Resourcementioning
confidence: 99%
“…only nutrients and not CO 2 ), whereas their alternate state (characterized by turf algae) was co-limited by both nutrients and CO 2 . This difference in carbon limitation demonstrates the potential for elevated CO 2 to influence turf expansion [32], especially when amplified by human activities that also increase nutrient loads [33]. This response is characteristic of co-limitation by multiple resources [34].…”
Section: Carbon Dioxide As a Carbon Resourcementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kelp forest declines have now been documented in many regions in response to a variety of stressors (18,(31)(32)(33)(34)(35), but kelp abundances have been stable or increasing in other areas (17,36,37). Here, we amass a global database of kelp abundances to provide a comprehensive picture of kelp forest change.…”
Section: Significancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Alternately, loss of coral or kelp often involves rapid colonisation of new space by ephemeral and fast growing algae, which can persist for decades in both coral reefs (Hughes, 1994) and kelp forests (Connell et al, 2008). Identification of the conditions that cause these algae to change function from early successional stages to more permanent occupiers of space is often key to understanding why corals and kelps fail to regenerate after natural or human impacts.…”
Section: Habitat Loss Through Inhibition Of Replenishmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…coral reefs, kelp forests and seagrass meadows) that transition to a contrasting state under altered environmental conditions (e.g. shifts to primary producers of simpler architectural complexity; Bellwood et al, 2004;Connell et al, 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%