Results/Conclusions Results indicate that predators (the dogwhelk, Nucella lapillus, and the crab, Carcinus maenas) and the generalist, herbivorous snail, Littorina littorea, were more abundant on southern shores than northern shores, and that these differences in abundance influenced patterns of invertebrate (barnacles, Semibalanus balanoides, and mussels, Mytilus spp.) and algal (the canopy forming rockweed, Fucus vesiculosus) recovery. Thus, strong consumer control was confirmed on southern GOM rocky shores, but in contrast, not supported the north. For example, F. vesiculosus recovered faster and Mytilus spp. were more abundant when mobile consumers were excluded in the south, but consumer exclusion had no impact in the north. In contrast to southern shores, clearing size and recruitment limitation drove recovery patterns in the northern GOM. Large clearings in the north, uninfluenced by the surrounding algal canopy, recovered faster than small clearings, though the mechanism behind this pattern remains unclear. In addition, low recruitment of sessile invertebrates (S. balanoides and Mytilus spp.) in the north indicates that nearshore oceanographic processes may play a larger role in GOM community dynamics than previously assumed. Consequently, further investigation into the impacts of disturbance size and bottom-up processes at a larger scale throughout the GOM will further our understanding of how these classic model systems operate and will inform community ecology theory.