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Marine and Freshwater Research Marine and Freshwater Research Society
Advances in the aquatic sciences
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Abundance and distribution of South Australia’s endemic sea star, Parvulastra parvivipara (Asteroidea: Asterinidae)

Lana M. Roediger A B and Toby F. Bolton A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Lincoln Marine Science Centre, School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, PO Box 2023, Port Lincoln, South Australia 5606, Australia.

B Corresponding author. Email: lana.roediger@flinders.edu.au

Marine and Freshwater Research 59(3) 205-213 https://doi.org/10.1071/MF07084
Submitted: 19 April 2007  Accepted: 25 January 2008   Published: 30 April 2008

Abstract

Parvulastra parvivipara is one of the smallest sea stars. It is restricted to tide pools on seven granite platforms within 200 km of coastline on the Eyre Peninsula of South Australia. This species exhibits intragonadal brooding and cannibalism of offspring, and gives birth to non-dispersive juveniles. Its distribution is variable, with specimens occupying few of the many seemingly similar tide pools at each site at differing densities. The abundance and distribution of P. parvivipara were examined in relation to twelve ecological variables of tide pools at all known mainland sites. An estimate of overall population size was also made. Multiple regression analyses showed that the abundance of P. parvivipara was negatively associated with wave-exposure and positively associated with the structural complexity of tide pools. A multiple logistic regression also indicated that the presence of sea stars (distribution) was more likely in structurally complex tide pools with low wave-exposure. Additionally, increasing elevation of a tide pool relative to the high-tide margin within the intertidal zone reduced the likelihood of finding sea stars. It is suggested that the variable abundance and distribution of P. parvivipara may be driven by broad scale ecological variables (e.g. complexity and wave-exposure), localised population extinctions (within tide pools) and recolonisation of tide pools via transportation of individuals across the rock platforms by wave-energy. It is also suggested that strikingly high abundances of P. parvivipara in some tide pools are likely to result from the reproductive mode of this species where each hermaphroditic individual gives birth to cohorts of up to twenty non-dispersive juveniles.

Additional keywords: dispersal, intertidal, Patiriella, rocky shore, tide pool.


Acknowledgements

We thank Assoc. Prof. M. Byrne and Prof. G. P. Quinn for their suggestions on many aspects of the project and two anonymous reviewers that greatly improved this manuscript. Thanks go to S. Drewer, M. Goecker, and A. Smith for their vital assistance in the field. We thank the Department for Environment and Heritage for supplying maps and aerial photographs. This research was supported by an early career establishment funding from Flinders University to Bolton, Honours research funding to Roediger, a Lirabenda Endowment Fund grant from the Field Naturalist Society of South Australia and a Wildlife Conservation Fund Research Grant to Bolton and Roediger.


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