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Assemblage turnover and taxonomic sufficiency of subtidal macroalgae at multiple spatial scales

Assemblage turnover and taxonomic sufficiency of subtidal macroalgae at multiple spatial scales
Assemblage turnover and taxonomic sufficiency of subtidal macroalgae at multiple spatial scales
Spatial variability in the structure of subtidal macroalgal assemblages in southwest Australia was examined at multiple spatial scales using a three-factor hierarchal design. Spatial extents ranged from metres (between quadrats) to many hundreds of kilometres (between regions), and the study encompassed > 2000 km of temperate coastline. In addition, the influence of taxonomic resolution, from species level data to class level, on spatial patterns was investigated to assess the potential evolutionary timescales of the pattern and for developing cost effective regionally applicable surrogates for biodiversity monitoring. Almost 300 species were identified from 14 sites, representing considerable biodiversity and a significant subset of the total benthic macroalgal diversity in the region (? 1000 species). Multivariate variability was significant at all spatial scales examined, but most prominent at smallest spatial scales, regardless of taxonomic resolution. Assemblage and species turnover was pronounced at scales of metres to hundreds of metres. Generally, small scale patchiness was a ubiquitous pattern for all individual taxa examined, regardless of taxonomic resolution, while variability at the scale of 10s of km was less important. Even so, differences in spatial variability between taxa were observed, and ecological and historical reasons for such differences are proposed. Taxonomic aggregation to family level had minimal effect on spatial patterns, but aggregation to order level led to changes in some aspects of patterns of assemblage structure. The unique and speciose macroalgal assemblages on subtidal reefs in southwest Australia are shaped by a complex array of historical and contemporary processes that act at multiple spatial (and temporal) scales. Understanding the relative importance of these processes requires that further manipulative and correlative work is conducted across a range of ecologically-important spatial scales.
kelp beds, nearshore ecology, nested designs, southwest australia, spatial variability
0022-0981
76-86
Smale, Dan A.
19528a3a-f66c-474d-ae13-c6405b8014ab
Kendrick, Gary A.
0353334b-ba64-42b0-8162-4d8ad75279b6
Wernberg, Thomas
bd368108-a7e1-4d4b-b4c2-6102aae7a7ff
Smale, Dan A.
19528a3a-f66c-474d-ae13-c6405b8014ab
Kendrick, Gary A.
0353334b-ba64-42b0-8162-4d8ad75279b6
Wernberg, Thomas
bd368108-a7e1-4d4b-b4c2-6102aae7a7ff

Smale, Dan A., Kendrick, Gary A. and Wernberg, Thomas (2010) Assemblage turnover and taxonomic sufficiency of subtidal macroalgae at multiple spatial scales. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 384 (1-2), 76-86. (doi:10.1016/j.jembe.2009.11.013).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Spatial variability in the structure of subtidal macroalgal assemblages in southwest Australia was examined at multiple spatial scales using a three-factor hierarchal design. Spatial extents ranged from metres (between quadrats) to many hundreds of kilometres (between regions), and the study encompassed > 2000 km of temperate coastline. In addition, the influence of taxonomic resolution, from species level data to class level, on spatial patterns was investigated to assess the potential evolutionary timescales of the pattern and for developing cost effective regionally applicable surrogates for biodiversity monitoring. Almost 300 species were identified from 14 sites, representing considerable biodiversity and a significant subset of the total benthic macroalgal diversity in the region (? 1000 species). Multivariate variability was significant at all spatial scales examined, but most prominent at smallest spatial scales, regardless of taxonomic resolution. Assemblage and species turnover was pronounced at scales of metres to hundreds of metres. Generally, small scale patchiness was a ubiquitous pattern for all individual taxa examined, regardless of taxonomic resolution, while variability at the scale of 10s of km was less important. Even so, differences in spatial variability between taxa were observed, and ecological and historical reasons for such differences are proposed. Taxonomic aggregation to family level had minimal effect on spatial patterns, but aggregation to order level led to changes in some aspects of patterns of assemblage structure. The unique and speciose macroalgal assemblages on subtidal reefs in southwest Australia are shaped by a complex array of historical and contemporary processes that act at multiple spatial (and temporal) scales. Understanding the relative importance of these processes requires that further manipulative and correlative work is conducted across a range of ecologically-important spatial scales.

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More information

Published date: 1 March 2010
Keywords: kelp beds, nearshore ecology, nested designs, southwest australia, spatial variability
Organisations: Ocean Biochemistry & Ecosystems

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 348306
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348306
ISSN: 0022-0981
PURE UUID: 2c9918ee-0695-4c1d-b2e5-5ee9ebb52e43

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Date deposited: 12 Feb 2013 11:57
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 12:57

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Contributors

Author: Dan A. Smale
Author: Gary A. Kendrick
Author: Thomas Wernberg

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