4.6 Article

Macrofauna communities across a seascape of seagrass meadows: environmental drivers, biodiversity patterns and conservation implications

期刊

BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
卷 30, 期 11, 页码 3023-3043

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-021-02234-3

关键词

Coastal habitats; alpha- and beta-diversity; Benthic; Baltic Sea; Community dynamics

资金

  1. University of Helsinki including Helsinki University Central Hospital
  2. Academy of Finland [294853]
  3. University of Helsinki
  4. Stockholm University strategic fund for collaborative research (The Baltic Bridge initiative)
  5. Walter and Andree de Nottbeck Foundation
  6. Academy of Finland (AKA) [294853, 294853] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Seagrass meadows play a key role in enhancing biodiversity by influencing the structure and diversity of macrofauna communities. The variability of macrobenthic communities in seagrass meadows is regulated by sedimentary and macrophyte factors. The increase in abundance and diversity of seagrass-associated macrofauna with greater habitat complexity attributes suggests the importance of conservation efforts on various types of meadows.
Similar to other coastal biogenic habitats (e.g. tidal marshes, kelp forests, mangroves and coral reefs), a key function of seagrass meadows is the enhancement of biodiversity. Variability at multiple spatial scales is a driver of biodiversity, but our understanding of the response of macrofauna communities to variability of seagrass meadows is limited. We examined the macrofauna community structure (abundance and biomass) and diversity patterns (alpha- and beta-diversity) across a seascape gradient of eleven seagrass meadows differing in the number, composition and density of plant species. The variability of the macrobenthic communities was regulated by a combination of sedimentary (mainly for the infauna) and macrophyte (mainly for the epifauna) predictors. We demonstrate that the natural occurrence of drifting algae trapped in the aboveground complexity of the meadows benefits seagrass macrofauna. Seagrass-associated macrofauna showed a clear increase in abundance and alpha-diversity metrics with increasing habitat complexity attributes (i.e. shoot density, plant biomass and canopy height). Furthermore, partitioning of beta-diversity (i.e. the variation of species composition between sites) implied the replacement of some species by others between sites (i.e. spatial turnover) instead of a process of species loss (or gain) from site to site (i.e. nestedness). Therefore, the enhancement of macrofauna diversity across an increasing gradient of seagrass complexity, and the dominance of the turnover component suggest that devoting conservation efforts on many different types of meadows, including the less diverse, should be a priority for coastal habitat-management.

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