Aspects of marine fouling in western Cape waters

Bibliography: pages 169-178. === Two independent investigations into aspects of marine fouling were conducted in Simonsbay and Table Bay during 1979 to 1981. The development of macrofouling communities on six test materials was examined at 10m and 20m depths in Simonsbay for periods ranging from one...

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Main Author: Henschel, Johannes Robert
Other Authors: Buys, M E L
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22564
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-225642020-10-06T05:10:47Z Aspects of marine fouling in western Cape waters Henschel, Johannes Robert Buys, M E L Branch, George M Zoology Bibliography: pages 169-178. Two independent investigations into aspects of marine fouling were conducted in Simonsbay and Table Bay during 1979 to 1981. The development of macrofouling communities on six test materials was examined at 10m and 20m depths in Simonsbay for periods ranging from one month to one year. Community development was similar on inert non-reactive materials, aluminium, stainless steel, fibre glass and polyvinylchloride, but was reduced on non-wettable silicon rubber and corrodible mild steel. Macrofouling was characterized by seasonal succession with minimum colonization rates during winter, when adverse weather and low temperature conditions prevailed. The nature of fouling differed with depth. At 10m depth, mussel and barnacle-dominated communities developed rapidly, while at 20m depth, ascidian and barnacle-dominated communities developed more slowly. The role of primary film formation in the colonization of substrata by invertebrates was investigated in short-term studies conducted in Simonsbay and Table Bay. Surface-bound antibiotics, streptomycin and penicillin, were used to inhibit bacterial proliferation, while a herbicide, diuron, was employed to prevent diatom growth. The colonization by invertebrates was monitored on these surfaces and compared to surfaces where primary film development was normal, or where it was advanced by pre-culturing in laboratory seawater. It was found that invertebrates attached soon after panel exposure and that differences in the degree of primary film development were of little consequence to their settlement. The apparent discrepancy of these observations with previous findings is discussed, with special reference to the location of test sites in relation to mature communities. 2016-11-16T13:25:02Z 2016-11-16T13:25:02Z 1981 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22564 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Biological Sciences
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Zoology
spellingShingle Zoology
Henschel, Johannes Robert
Aspects of marine fouling in western Cape waters
description Bibliography: pages 169-178. === Two independent investigations into aspects of marine fouling were conducted in Simonsbay and Table Bay during 1979 to 1981. The development of macrofouling communities on six test materials was examined at 10m and 20m depths in Simonsbay for periods ranging from one month to one year. Community development was similar on inert non-reactive materials, aluminium, stainless steel, fibre glass and polyvinylchloride, but was reduced on non-wettable silicon rubber and corrodible mild steel. Macrofouling was characterized by seasonal succession with minimum colonization rates during winter, when adverse weather and low temperature conditions prevailed. The nature of fouling differed with depth. At 10m depth, mussel and barnacle-dominated communities developed rapidly, while at 20m depth, ascidian and barnacle-dominated communities developed more slowly. The role of primary film formation in the colonization of substrata by invertebrates was investigated in short-term studies conducted in Simonsbay and Table Bay. Surface-bound antibiotics, streptomycin and penicillin, were used to inhibit bacterial proliferation, while a herbicide, diuron, was employed to prevent diatom growth. The colonization by invertebrates was monitored on these surfaces and compared to surfaces where primary film development was normal, or where it was advanced by pre-culturing in laboratory seawater. It was found that invertebrates attached soon after panel exposure and that differences in the degree of primary film development were of little consequence to their settlement. The apparent discrepancy of these observations with previous findings is discussed, with special reference to the location of test sites in relation to mature communities.
author2 Buys, M E L
author_facet Buys, M E L
Henschel, Johannes Robert
author Henschel, Johannes Robert
author_sort Henschel, Johannes Robert
title Aspects of marine fouling in western Cape waters
title_short Aspects of marine fouling in western Cape waters
title_full Aspects of marine fouling in western Cape waters
title_fullStr Aspects of marine fouling in western Cape waters
title_full_unstemmed Aspects of marine fouling in western Cape waters
title_sort aspects of marine fouling in western cape waters
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22564
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