4.5 Article

Diversity Patterns and Community Structure of the Ground-Associated Macrofauna along the Beach-Inland Transition Zone of Small Tropical Islands

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d13080377

Keywords

atoll; edge effect; insular ecosystem; species richness; zonation

Funding

  1. Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes scholarship

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Biodiversity shows distinct patterns where different habitats meet, especially in transition zones like shores. This study found that species composition gradually changes along the beach-inland transition zone of small islands, while overall species richness, diversity, and abundance do not change significantly. These findings provide insights into the unique characteristics of insular ecosystems at transition zones.
Biodiversity follows distinct and observable patterns. Where two systems meet, biodiversity is often increased, due to overlapping occurrence ranges and the presence of specialized species that can tolerate the dynamic conditions of the transition zone. One of the most pronounced transition zones occurs at shores, where oceans and terrestrial habitat collide, forming the shore-inland transition zone. The relevance of this transition zone in shaping a system's community structure is particularly pronounced on small islands due to their high shore-to-inland-area ratio. However, the community structure of insular faunas along this transition zone is unknown. Here, we investigated the diversity patterns along the beach-inland transition zone of small islands and tested the hypothesis that species diversity increases toward the transition zone where beach and interior habitat meet. By measuring environmental parameters, resource availability, and ground-associated macrofauna diversity along transects running across the beach-inland transition zone, we show that a gradual change in species composition from beach to the inland exists, but neither taxa richness, diversity, nor overall abundance changed significantly. These findings offer important insights into insular community structure at the transition zone from sea to land that are relevant to better understand the dynamic and unique characteristics of insular ecosystems.

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