4.4 Article

Spatio-temporal variability of amphipod assemblages associated with rhodolith seabeds

Journal

MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH
Volume 72, Issue 1, Pages 76-83

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/MF19360

Keywords

algal biomass; Atlantic Ocean; Canary Islands; crustaceans; maerl; population structure

Funding

  1. Excellence International Campus of the Canary Islands (CEI-Canarias)
  2. Agency for Research, Innovation and Information Society of the Canary Islands
  3. EcoAqua European project (ERA CHAIR program) [621341]

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The diversity, structure, and abundance of amphipod assemblages in rhodolith seabeds can vary greatly across both time (seasons) and space (depth), with more diverse and abundant communities often observed during spring at depths of 18 and 25 meters.
Rhodolith seabeds are habitats underpinned by free-living calcareous macroalgae. We partitioned the relevance of the scale of temporal (four seasons throughout two successive years) and spatial (three depth strata: 18, 25 and 40 m) variation on the diversity, structure and abundance of amphipod assemblages living in rhodolith seabeds from Gran Canaria Island. In total, 3996 individuals, belonging to 32 taxa, were identified. Multivariate analyses showed consistent differences in assemblage structure among seasons and depths; more diverse and abundant amphipod assemblages were often observed during spring at 18- and 25-m than at 40-m depth. Ovigerous females of Gammaropsis ostroumowi and Ampithoe ramondi were observed mainly at 18 and 25 m. Juveniles of both species were exclusively recorded at 18 and 25 m, so denoting a clear segregation in their population structure with depth. In summary, this study has demonstrated that the ecological pattern of amphipods associated with rhodolith seabeds can vary greatly across both time (seasons) and space (depth).

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