Abstract
The effects of ambient solar UV on community productivity and structure were assessed during primary succession of benthic diatoms on artificial substrate in a coral reef of the Caribbean. Artificial substrates, partially enclosed by UV cutoff filters, were placed at a depth of 60 cm below surface. During the initial colonization stages, the assemblages exposed to the full solar spectrum had a mean productivity 43.4% lower than the assemblages exposed to PAR+UVA only. Some differences in species diversity of assemblages under the different UV treatments were also observed. Sensitive species to UVB exposure were Mastogloia angulata, M. ovata, M. paradoxa, Nitzschia longissima, Plagiogramma staurophorum, Rhopalodia musculus, and Surirella ovata. These UVB effects gradually diminished as succession proceeded; 5 to 6 weeks after the placement of the substrates in the water, no significant differences in productivity were observed between the different treatments, while after 6 weeks of growth, species diversity and evenness were higher, although not statistically significant, in the UVB-exposed assemblages. During the first 2 weeks of growth, the productivity under PAR+UVA was significantly lower than that under PAR only.
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Received: 12 July 1996 / Accepted: 20 November 1997
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Santas, R., Santas, P., Lianou, C. et al. Community responses to UV radiation. II. Effects of solar UVB on field-grown diatom assemblages of the Carribean. Marine Biology 131, 163–171 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002270050307
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002270050307