Annual growth per plant and allocation of growth to the stipe were
measured in 2- to 4-year-old plants of Laminaria hyperborea from
five
stations with different degrees of wave exposure and different amounts
of canopy biomass. Low growth in plants with initial stipe lengths
of less than about 40 cm suggested that the presence of canopy-forming
plants suppresses growth of understorey plants, and this was
supported by the high lamina growth rate of understorey plants after removal
of the canopy-forming plants. Canopy biomass and wave
exposure were found to exert a differential effect on the growth of the
age groups examined. Average annual growth per plant in 2- to 3-year-old
plants decreased with increasing canopy biomass; growth of 4-year-old plants
was not significantly influenced by canopy
biomass, but increased with increasing wave exposure of the sites, suggesting
an influence of some factor connected with wave exposure.
The allocation of annual growth to stipe and lamina was also found to be
influenced by canopy biomass and wave exposure. In 2- to 3-year-old plants
the amount of annual growth allocated to the stipe increased with increasing
canopy biomass while a positive linear
regression between allocation of growth to the stipe and wave exposure
was found in 4-year-old plants. Individual measurements carried
out at a wave-exposed locality showed that the maximum allocation of growth
to the stipe in the intermediate-sized plants occurred
simultaneously with a period of rapid stipe elongation. Thus, rapid stipe
growth in L. hyperborea can be associated with high allocation
of
annual growth to the stipe when the plants are about to grow into the canopy-forming
layer. We suggest that this is due to the
combined effects of suboptimal light levels within the kelp forest and
high wave exposure.