The transfer of seaweeds from subtidal bottoms to nearby intertidal rocky shores is a common but often overlooked phenomenon. Freshly detached seaweeds often represent critical trophic subsidies for herbivores living in upper-shore rocky intertidal areas, such as the marine snail Diloma nigerrima...
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http://repositorio.unab.cl/xmlui/handle/ria/8559
Quintanilla-Ahumada, D.
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Quijón, P.A.
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Navarro, J.M.
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Pulgar, J.
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Duarte, C.
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[Living on a trophic subsidy: Algal quality drives an upper-shore herbivore’s consumption, preference and absorption but not growth rates]
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Living on a trophic subsidy: Algal quality drives an upper-shore herbivore’s consumption, preference and absorption but not growth rates