Genera as proxies for species ?- and ?-diversity: tested across a deep-water Atlantic-Arctic boundary
Genera as proxies for species ?- and ?-diversity: tested across a deep-water Atlantic-Arctic boundary
The deep-sea floor is increasingly subject to anthropogenic impacts. Consequently, there are increasing efforts to develop appropriate management strategies. Species-level indicators and assessments are hampered in the deep sea by the high proportion of unknown species routinely encountered. If environmental management is to keep pace with exploitation, alternative approaches including higher taxon surrogacy (taxonomic sufficiency) must be considered. Here we compare genus- and species-level studies of the diversity and ecology of deep-sea macrobenthos on the West Shetland Slope (NE Atlantic). This is an environmentally complex region that encompasses a biogeographic transition from temperate North Atlantic to Arctic conditions, and so may be particularly challenging for any general relationship between species- and genus-level analyses. We ask two questions: (i) does genus diversity reflect species diversity and (ii) does genus-level ecology reflect species-level ecology? We conclude that among the West Shetland Slope macrobenthos: (i) genus-level ?- and ?-diversity measures are highly correlated with and good predictors of their species-level equivalents and (ii) that their ecology is very well described by genus-level data. We further note that, given the complexity of the West Shetland Slope environment, it may be reasonable to expect these conclusions to hold in other deep-sea environments.
Biodiversity, deep sea, higher taxon surrogacy, macrobenthos, Northeast Atlantic, species-genus ratio, taxonomic sufficiency
436-444
Bett, Brian J.
61342990-13be-45ae-9f5c-9540114335d9
Narayanaswamy, Bhavani E.
fcecfc2f-1db0-4786-a379-78411de47a3d
December 2014
Bett, Brian J.
61342990-13be-45ae-9f5c-9540114335d9
Narayanaswamy, Bhavani E.
fcecfc2f-1db0-4786-a379-78411de47a3d
Bett, Brian J. and Narayanaswamy, Bhavani E.
(2014)
Genera as proxies for species ?- and ?-diversity: tested across a deep-water Atlantic-Arctic boundary.
Marine Ecology, 35 (4), .
(doi:10.1111/maec.12100).
Abstract
The deep-sea floor is increasingly subject to anthropogenic impacts. Consequently, there are increasing efforts to develop appropriate management strategies. Species-level indicators and assessments are hampered in the deep sea by the high proportion of unknown species routinely encountered. If environmental management is to keep pace with exploitation, alternative approaches including higher taxon surrogacy (taxonomic sufficiency) must be considered. Here we compare genus- and species-level studies of the diversity and ecology of deep-sea macrobenthos on the West Shetland Slope (NE Atlantic). This is an environmentally complex region that encompasses a biogeographic transition from temperate North Atlantic to Arctic conditions, and so may be particularly challenging for any general relationship between species- and genus-level analyses. We ask two questions: (i) does genus diversity reflect species diversity and (ii) does genus-level ecology reflect species-level ecology? We conclude that among the West Shetland Slope macrobenthos: (i) genus-level ?- and ?-diversity measures are highly correlated with and good predictors of their species-level equivalents and (ii) that their ecology is very well described by genus-level data. We further note that, given the complexity of the West Shetland Slope environment, it may be reasonable to expect these conclusions to hold in other deep-sea environments.
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 January 2014
Published date: December 2014
Keywords:
Biodiversity, deep sea, higher taxon surrogacy, macrobenthos, Northeast Atlantic, species-genus ratio, taxonomic sufficiency
Organisations:
Marine Biogeochemistry
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 362278
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/362278
ISSN: 0173-9565
PURE UUID: 303a2fc8-9454-4679-b505-d6635cc461d8
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Date deposited: 19 Feb 2014 10:39
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 16:02
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Author:
Brian J. Bett
Author:
Bhavani E. Narayanaswamy
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