4.5 Article

Mesoscale Spatial Patterns of Gulf of Maine Rocky Intertidal Communities

期刊

DIVERSITY-BASEL
卷 14, 期 7, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d14070557

关键词

nearshore biodiversity; benthic marine organisms; marine benthic ecology; species similarity; biogeography; sea surface temperature; thermogeography

资金

  1. Nature Conservancy
  2. Maine Sea Grant
  3. Census of Marine Life programs Natural Geography in Shore Areas (NaGISA)
  4. History of Marine Animal Populations (HMAP)
  5. GoM Area Program (GoMA)
  6. Maine Chapter

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This study examined the similarity of macroinvertebrate species assemblages from exposed rocky headlands in the Gulf of Maine to understand the mesoscale patterns and their relationship with environmental factors. The study found that species assemblage similarity was correlated with latitude, and there was a distinct grouping of sampling sites separating two Gulf regions. Species turnover accounted for a large portion of the regional dissimilarity, with molluscs and crustaceans contributing the most. Satellite-derived temperatures explained a significant amount of the regional variation. These findings suggest that hydrographic features and associated environmental conditions influence community dynamics and shape the dissimilarity between Gulf regions.
Community similarity among macroinvertebrate species assemblages from 12 exposed rocky headlands surveyed in 2004, 2007, and 2012 was examined to resolve mesoscale patterns along an east-west linear distance of 366 km in the coastal Gulf of Maine. The goals were: (1) detect latitudinal patterns of species assemblage similarity and (2) relate species assemblage similarities to environmental factors. Assemblage similarities were correlated with latitude. There was a distinguishable grouping of sampling sites fitting two Gulf regions that separate at mid-coast Maine. This pattern was uniquely intertidal and not shown by subtidal species assemblages. beta diversity was high, did not differ between regions, and species turnover accounted for 91% of it. Molluscs and crustaceans, major components of surveyed communities, contributed most of the dissimilarity between regions. Satellite-derived shore and sea surface temperatures explained a significant amount of the variation responsible for producing regional patterns. The regions corresponded with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current. These hydrographic features and associated environmental conditions are hypothesized to influence community dynamics and shape the dissimilarity between Gulf regions. The predicted warming of the Gulf of Maine portend change in species turnover from species invasions and range shifts potentially altering rocky intertidal community patterns.

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