The shore environments of most sub-Antarctic islands have been described in a number of
previous studies. However, there have been few attempts to quantify the variation in population and
community patterns over different spatial scales. The objectives of this study were to provide an analysis of
differences in the community structure of the biota of three exposed shore zones and of the macrofauna
inhabiting holdfasts of the kelp Durvillaea antarctica across spatial scales of hundreds of metres, kilometres,
and between a sheltered and exposed coast. Data were collected using a combination of quadrat, transect and
direct sampling methods over the 1994–95 summer season. The results indicated that there were significant
differences between coasts for some of the biotic variables in most of the habitats examined but that
differences at the smaller spatial scales were more often significant. Thus, although wave exposure exerts an
obvious effect on the shore biota of Macquarie Island, these effects are modified by other factors operating at
smaller spatial scales. For the holdfast macrofauna, the overall patterns of community structure are likely to
be due to the differential response of the component taxa to variation in holdfast volume and holdfast
sediment content as well as other, currently undetermined factors.