Journal
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 253, Issue -, Pages 77-83Publisher
INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps253077
Keywords
biodiversity; intermediate-disturbance hypothesis; mosaic cycle
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Analysis of seabed video-strips on the Weddell Sea shelf provided evidence that the effects of iceberg scouring on megabenthic assemblages differ, depending on spatial scale. At a local scale (1 to 100 m), undisturbed glass sponge-associated habitats were significantly more diverse than disturbed ones; at a regional scale (1 to 100 km), increased habitat heterogeneity caused by iceberg scouring enhanced species diversity. The pace and succession of the recolonization exhibits high variability and is difficult to predict. The results not only underpin the concept that disturbance events are essential factors in the regulation of ecosystem dynamics, but also emphasize the relevance of scale in the evaluation and explanation of diversity patterns.
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