The algal vegetation of five diving profiles situated at exposed
sites of
the outer Öregrund archipelago, southern Bothnian Sea, Sweden,
was investigated by SCUBA diving in 1996. The vegetation of the same profiles
had been described earlier in 1943–4 and 1984. In the
present study, special attention was paid to the occurrence of the
structurally important belt-forming brown algae Fucus vesiculosus
and
Sphacelaria arctica in comparison with the situation 52–53
and
12 years earlier. Prominent differences between the 1940s and 1996 were
found. The weighted average depth of the F. vesiculosus
belt in 1996 was about 1·7 m shallower than in the 1940s, and the
lower
distribution limit of this species was about 2·5 m shallower.
At its lower end the Fucus belt was replaced by epilithic red
algae, mainly
Furcellaria lumbricalis, Rhodomela confervoides and
Polysiphonia fucoides. These results were similar to those of
the 1984 study and show
neither an improvement nor a deterioration of the belt during the
past 12 years. In four of the five diving profiles, a conspicuous belt
of S.
arctica occurred in the lower sublittoral, similar to that observed
in the 1940s, but in one of the five profiles the S. arctica belt
was heavily
impoverished. These results contrast with the 1984 study which reported
that S. arctica had practically disappeared from all profiles.
The
epiphytic cover of annual filamentous algae, dominated by
Pilayella littoralis and Ceramium gobii, was
higher in 1996 than in 1943–4. The
results of this comparative study are discussed in relation to the
general eutrophication of the Baltic Sea.