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Journal ArticleDOI

Territorial Behavior of the Owl Limpet, Lottia Gigantea

John Stimson
- 01 Jan 1970 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 1, pp 113-118
TLDR
The defense of the territories against intrusions by other grazers permits the growth of a thick algal film on which the Lottia can effectively graze, and their response to predatory snails may be a defense mechanisms.
Abstract
Lottia gigantea, a large (up to 8 cm in length) limpet of the California and northern Mexican coast, lives in association with an approximately 1,000 cm2 area of algal film in which its grazing marks can be seen, whereas the remainder of the rock surface is usually free of any visible film. These areas of algal film represent the territories of the Lottia; within them the animals do all their grazing. They keep their territories free of other organisms by shoving off any intruders: other Lottia, grazing limpets of the genus Acmaea, predatory snails, and sessile organisms such as anemones and barnacles. Within 2—3 weeks after Lottia were removed from their territories, the density of Acmaea in these territories increases to that found outside them, and the algal film disappeared. Apparently the defense of the territories against intrusions by other grazers permits the growth of a thick algal film on which the Lottia can effectively graze. Their reaction to sessile organisms prevents these animals from encroaching on and covering the territory. Their response to predatory snails may be a defense mechanisms.

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Citations
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Competition, Disturbance, and Community Organization: The Provision and Subsequent Utilization of Space in a Rocky Intertidal Community

TL;DR: This study presents an experimental evaluation of the effects of natural physical disturbances and competitive interactions on populations of sessile organisms in the rocky intertidal community, for which space can be demonstrated to be the most important limiting resource.
Journal ArticleDOI

Field experiments on interspecific competition

TL;DR: Competition was found in 90% of the studies and 76% of their species, indicating its pervasive importance in ecological systems, and the Hairston-Slobodkin-Smith hypothesis concerning variation in the importance of competition between trophic levels was strongly supported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Species Diversity Gradients: Synthesis of the Roles of Predation, Competition, and Temporal Heterogeneity

TL;DR: It is suggested that the "predation" and "competition" hypotheses of community organization and species diversity are complementary, and that Predator-mediated escapes by primary producers from herbivores may explain the apparent importance of interspecific competition in certain primary producer associations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Community Interactions on Marine Rocky Intertidal Shores

TL;DR: In the marine rocky intertidal, the authors of as mentioned in this paper proposed a method to measure the dynamic relations between organisms and their physical and biological environment using direct measurement of dynamic relations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spacing Patterns in Mobile Animals

TL;DR: This review will examine concepts of spacing patterns in mobile animals from the perspective of their proximate causes, their ecological consequences, and their adaptive significance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The biological significance of the territories of birds.

TL;DR: Since territorial behaviour has consequences both harmful and advantageous to the individual's chances of ultimate reproductive success, and since the inter relations between the selective forces governing behaviour, structure and physiology are extremely complex, simple answers about the function of territory cannot be expected.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Biodemography of an Intertidal Snail Population

Peter W. Frank
- 01 Nov 1965 - 
TL;DR: Experimental manipulation of density indicates that emigration rates are density—dependent, and the mechanism of density regulation is postulated as operating even at low overall densities because of the behavior pattern of the species.