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Cambridge University Press, Antarctic Science, 4(11), p. 408-414, 1999

DOI: 10.1017/s0954102099000516

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Growth and age of the Antarctic bryozoan Cellaria incula on the Weddell Sea shelf

Journal article published in 1999 by Thomas Brey, Dieter Gerdes, Julian Gutt, Andreas Mackensen ORCID, Andreas Starmans
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

We analysed growth of the arborescent Antarctic cheilostome bryozoan Cellaria incula by stable carbon and oxygen isotope analysis. The growth of one complete branch of C. incula takes one year, i.e. owing to the bifurcate colony structure two new branches grow from each branch of the previous generation. The maximum age of a C. incula colony is likely to be more than 14 years. Annual production-to-biomass ratio is 0.67, the highest value hitherto measured for any benthic invertebrate south of 62°S. Comparatively fast growth and high productivity identify C. incula as a pioneer species which is able to quickly occupy spatial niches produced by iceberg scouring on the Antarctic shelf.