Publication Date:
2020-02-10
Description:
Multiple environmental factors control benthic community patterns, and their relative importance varies
with spatial scale. Since this variation is difficult to evaluate quantitatively, extensive sampling across a broad
range of spatial scales is required. Here, we present a first case study on Southern Ocean shelf benthos, in which
mega-epibenthic communities and biota-environment relationships have been explored at multiple spatial
scales. The analyses encompassed 20 seafloor, water-column, and sea-ice parameters, as well as abundances of
18 mega-epibenthic taxa in a total of 2799 high-resolution seabed images taken at 28 stations at 32–786 m
depth off the northern Antarctic Peninsula. Based on a priori nesting of sampling stations into ecoregions, subregions,
and habitats, analyses indicated most pronounced patchiness levels at finest (within transects among
adjacent seabed photos) and largest (among ecoregions) spatial scale considered. Using an alternative approach,
explicitly involving the spatial distances between the geo-referenced data, Moran’s Eigenvector mapping (MEM)
classified the continuum of spatial scales into four categories: broad (〉 60 km), meso (10–60 km), small
(2–10 km), and fine (〈 2 km). MEM analyses generally indicated an increase in mega-epibenthic community
complexity with increasing spatial scale. Moreover, strong relationships between biota and environmental
drivers were found at scales of 〉 2 km. In contrast, few environmental variables contributed to explaining biotic
structures at finer scales. These are likely rather determined by nonmeasured environmental variables, as well as
biological traits and interactions that are assumed to be most effective at small spatial scales.
Repository Name:
EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
Type:
Article
,
isiRev
Format:
application/pdf
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