Ge'dium sesquipedale (Clem.) Born. et Thur. is commercially exploited along the northeast Atlantic for the production of agar. Its frond dynamics were studied by tagging individual fronds in a typlcal, dense, monospecific G. sesquipedale stand located in a commercial bed off Cape Espichel, Portugal. Storms and commercial harvesting play a key role in the regulation of the species population dynamics. Frond mortality was relatively constant throughout the year, but peaked in August-September during harvest season. High probabilities of frond breakage and low frond mortality during late fall and winter (periods coincident with severe storms) suggest that under natural disturbances, G. sesquipedale fronds break rather than detach. Frond elongation rate shows a distinct seasonal pattern: high during spring and summer and low In winter. The relat~onships among G. sesquipedalevital rates and both size and frond history (i.e. effects of frond length on mortality, growth and breakage, and effects of frond length, growth, breakage and presence of epiphytes on the next month's growth, breakage and mortality) were analysed using log-linear methods. Shorter fronds (S 10.1 cm) were less susceptible to breakage and had higher growth probability than longer fronds, while longer fronds showed higher elongation rates, particularly during the periods of faster growth (late spring and summer). During storms (late fall and winter), longer fronds had a greater chance of being detached than smaller ones. By contrast, during spring and early summer, frond mortality was greater for shorter fronds. There were no clear indications that G. sesquipedale recent biological history influenced its fate. Results indicate the potential for yield-overharvesting of the Cape Espichel G. sesquipedale bed, because the harvest season starts before peak summer production. Particularly when the previous winter and fall were stormy, as was the case during this study, could better yields be obtained by delaying the harvest season.