4.0 Article

Seaweed diversity associated with a Brazilian tropical rhodolith bed

Journal

CIENCIAS MARINAS
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 371-391

Publisher

INST INVESTIGACIONES OCEANOLOGICAS, U A B C
DOI: 10.7773/cm.v36i4.1782

Keywords

rhodoliths; marine algae of Brazil; benthic algal community; Espirito Santo State; crustose coralline algae

Funding

  1. Brazilian Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq)
  2. FAPERJ
  3. FAPESP
  4. University of the Western Cape
  5. National Research Foundation of South Africa
  6. CAPES

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This study describes the predominantly tropical, subtidal seaweed populations growing on rhodoliths between 4 and 18 m depth in the southern part of Espirito Santo State (Brazil). Qualitative and quantitative sampling revealed species-rich algal communities, comprising 167 species. Three species of rhodophytes represent new records for the Brazilian marine flora (Lithothamnion muelleri, Scinaia aborealis, and Mesophyllum engelhartii). Marked seasonal differences in fleshy algal species composition and abundance were related to seasonal instabilities caused by winter-storm disturbance over the rhodolith beds. In relation to depth, rhodolith density appears to be an important factor for the variation in the abundance of fleshy algae. The rhodolith community is composed of at least seven nongeniculate crustose coralline algal species. Rhodolith beds in southern Espirito Santo State, in an arca of 150 km(2), provide an important habitat for epibenthic communities, supporting 25% of the known macroalgal species richness along the Brazilian coast.

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