Vegetative and reproductive growth of individually marked plants of the brown alga Himanthalia elongata was monitored over 2·5 years
at two sites with different wave exposures on the Irish west coast. Macro-recruits were first visible to the unaided eye in February/March.
About 65% of all buttons produced receptacles during autumn of the same year, whereas others remained sterile. Growth of receptacles
started between late August and late November, when vegetative plants were 9–14 months old, but no further plants became
reproductive after December. At both sites, length increase of receptacles was greatest between February and April, but only longitudinal
growth occurred and no more new dichotomies were produced. At the more wave-exposed site, growth was fastest in plants growing in
red algal turfs and slowest in plants on open rock. Growth rates were maximal when seawater temperatures were 10–12 °C in early
spring but decreased from May onwards with the maturation of receptacles aged 7–9 months in June. Release of viable gametes started in
June and continued throughout the autumn and winter, until all plants disappeared from the population in February. Plant density was
highest in March after the appearance of macro-recruits in the population, and declined during summer when the number of buttons
decreased. Percentage plant cover was highest in June immediately before the onset of gamete release and this was followed by the decay
and disintegration of receptacles. Since both survival and growth of young buttons was highest in red algal turfs and lowest on exposed
rocks, the distribution of H. elongata on semi-exposed shores in Ireland may be limited by the availability of suitable micro-habitats for
recruitment, and reduced by the early loss of fertile, adult plants from exposed sites.