Disturbance structures canopy and understory productivity along an
environmental gradient
Abstract
Disturbances often disproportionately impact different vegetation layers
in forests and other vertically-stratified ecosystems, shaping community
structure and ecosystem function. However, disturbance-driven changes
may be mediated by environmental conditions that affect habitat quality
and species interactions. In a decade-long field experiment, we tested
how kelp forest net primary productivity (NPP) responds to repeated
canopy loss along a gradient in grazing and substrate suitability. We
discovered that habitat quality can mediate the effects of intensified
disturbance on canopy and understory NPP. Experimental pulse and press
disturbances suppressed total macroalgal NPP, but effects were strongest
in high-quality habitats that supported dense kelp canopies that were
removed by disturbance. Understory macroalgae partly compensated for
canopy NPP losses and this effect magnified with increasing habitat
quality. Disturbance-driven increases in understory NPP were still
rising after 7–10 years of disturbance, demonstrating the value of
long-term experimentation for understanding ecosystem responses to
rapidly changing disturbance regimes.