Carbon and nitrogen contents of two intertidal fucoid species,
Fucus serratus and Himanthalia elongata, were investigated
with respect to
variations in seasonal resource availability, growth and reproductive requirements.
The linear growth rate of F. serratus peaked in spring at
2·3 cm 28 d−1, compared with <0·1 cm
28 d−1
in the winter. In H. elongata, the button diameter increased slowly
throughout the year
(<0·22 cm 28 d−1) ; in contrast, the receptacle
had an elongation rate of up to 7·8 cm 28 d−1
in the spring months. There was no
difference in the nitrogen content (% dry weight, dwt) of the vegetative
tissue of both non-reproductive and fertile thalli and receptacle
tissue of F. serratus, but the nitrogen content of all three tissue
types varied seasonally. Reproductive development was initiated in May
when nitrogen content was at its peak (3 % dwt). Tissue nitrogen content
decreased rapidly through reproductive development to a
minimum of less than 1·5% dwt in August; this decrease also occurred
in non-reproductive thalli. Tissue nitrogen varied between 0·5 and
1·75% dwt in the vegetative buttons on both non-reproductive and
fertile H. elongata, but not in a distinct seasonal manner. Receptacle
development in H. elongata was initiated in October/November.
The nitrogen content of the receptacle tissue increased rapidly in the
first
two months of reproductive development (up to 2·5% dwt) then progressively
decreased throughout the remaining period of
reproductive development. There was no evidence of carbon storage in the
vegetative tissues of either F. serratus or H. elongata.