4.4 Article

Role of non-indigenous species in structuring benthic communities after fragmentation events: an experimental approach

Journal

BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
Volume 24, Issue 7, Pages 2181-2199

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-022-02768-9

Keywords

Macroinvertebrates; Non-indigenous species (NIS); Recruitment; Disturbance; Marina environment; Biodiversity

Funding

  1. project MIMAR [MAC/4.6.d/066]
  2. project MIMAR+ [MAC2/4.6d/249]
  3. 2015 ARDITI Grant Programme Madeira 14-20 [M1420-09-5369-FSE-000002]
  4. Maria Zambrano contract UCA under the grants call for the requalification of the Spanish university system 2021-2023 - European Union-NextGenerationEU
  5. Project Observatorio Oceanico da Madeira-OOM by the Madeira Regional Operational Programme (Madeira 14-20), under the Portugal 2020 strategy, through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) [M1420-01-0145-FEDER-000001]
  6. project MARE-Centro de Ciencias do Mar e do Ambiente [UIDB/04292/2020]
  7. FCT-FundacAo para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia, I.P., under the Scientific Employment Stimulus-Institutional Call [CEECINST/00098/2018]
  8. FundacAo para a Ciencia e Tecnologia (FCT) [UIDB/04292/2020]

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This study investigates the synergistic interactions between fragmentation and biological invasions using submerged experimental settlement panels. The results show that crustose coralline algae can suppress the recruitment of some non-indigenous species, while highly fragmented habitats may promote the colonization of invasive species.
Habitat loss and fragmentation, and biological invasions are widely considered the most significant threats to global biodiversity. While marine invasions have already shown dramatic impacts around the world's coasts, many of these habitats are becoming increasingly urbanized, resulting in fragmentation of natural landscape worldwide. This study developed in Madeira (NE Atlantic) aims to understand the synergistic interactions between fragmentation and biological invasions using submerged experimental settlement panels in the field for 3 months. We fragmented crustose coralline habitats, decreasing patch size without an overall habitat loss, and determined its effects on the patterns of abundance of marine fouling organisms across limiting assemblages with or without the presence of non-indigenous species (NIS, considered invaded and non-invaded systems in this study). The presence of crustose coralline algae suppressed the recruitment of some NIS (Parasmitina alba and Botrylloides niger). Our results also showed that the abundance of NIS (e.g. B. niger) could be prompted in highly fragmented habitats, colonizing bare substrates very efficiently. Overall, evidence indicates that fragmentation events modulate biotic interactions and consequently determine the structure of the fouling communities. Future research should address both processes when analyzing biotic resistance to invasion in urban marine habitats.

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