Dyck and DeWreede, 2006b). For most seaweeds, such breakage soon translates into death for dislodged portions of thalli. Indeed, dislodged thalli and frond fragments form important carbon and nitrogen sources in coastal and nearshore environments (e.g. Rossi and Underwood, 2002;Dugan et al., 2003;Orr et al., 2005;Liebezeit et al., 2008;Lastra et al., 2008).Nonetheless, biomechanical models of macroalgal breakage have frequently underestimated, and sometimes greatly underestimated, breakage of seaweeds due to wave-imposed forces. The traditional approach has involved determination of a seaweed's breaking strength and comparison of this strength with maximal wave-induced force, with breakage often under-predicted (Koehl and Alberte, 1988;Gaylord et al., 1994;Johnson and Koehl, 1994;Friedland and Denny, 1995;Utter and Denny, 1996;Denny et al., 1997;Johnson, 2001;Kitzes and Denny, 2005). Researchers have suggested that other factors, such as damage due to herbivory, abrasion or physiological stressors, may account for observed breakage rates, weakening fronds that individual waves then break (Friedland and Denny, 1995;Utter and Denny, 1996;Kitzes and Denny, 2005;Denny, 2006).Additionally, researchers have investigated the possibility that seaweeds break not just from large individual wave-imposed forces but from damage accumulated over a series of wave-imposed forces (Hale, 2001;Mach et al., 2007a;Mach et al., 2007b;Mach, 2009 Accepted 24 January 2011 SUMMARY Seaweeds inhabiting the extreme hydrodynamic environment of wave-swept shores break frequently. However, traditional biomechanical analyses, evaluating breakage due to the largest individual waves, have perennially underestimated rates of macroalgal breakage. Recent laboratory testing has established that some seaweeds fail by fatigue, accumulating damage over a series of force impositions. Failure by fatigue may thus account, in part, for the discrepancy between prior breakage predictions, based on individual not repeated wave forces, and reality. Nonetheless, the degree to which fatigue breaks seaweeds on waveswept shores remains unknown. Here, we developed a model of fatigue breakage due to wave-induced forces for the macroalga Mazzaella flaccida. To test model performance, we made extensive measurements of M. flaccida breakage and of wave-induced velocities experienced by the macroalga. The fatigue-breakage model accounted for significantly more breakage than traditional prediction methods. For life history phases modeled most accurately, 105% (for female gametophytes) and 79% (for tetrasporophytes) of field-observed breakage was predicted, on average. When M. flaccida fronds displayed attributes such as temperature stress and substantial tattering, the fatigue-breakage model underestimated breakage, suggesting that these attributes weaken fronds and lead to more rapid breakage. Exposure to waves had the greatest influence on model performance. At the most wave-protected sites, the model underpredicted breakage, and at the most wave-exposed sites, it overp...
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