Title of article :
The spatial arrangement of reefs alters the ecological patterns of fauna between interspersed algal habitats
Author/Authors :
F. Tuya، نويسنده , , T. Wernberg، نويسنده , , M.S. Thomsen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Reef landscapes dominated by canopy-forming species are often irregular mosaics of habitats, with
important influences on associated fauna. This study tested if differences in the ecological patterns of
mobile fauna inhabiting interspersed (morphologically distinct) algal habitats were altered by the spatial
arrangement of reefs of varying proximity to the shoreline. Specifically, prosobranch gastropods were used
as models to test that: (1) there were differences in the ecological patterns (species composition and
abundances) between three algal habitats (the kelp Ecklonia radiata, fucalean macroalgae, and erect red
algae); (2) the magnitude of these differences depended on the position of reef lines (‘in-shore’ vs. ‘offshore’);
and (3) these effects were regionally consistent across a w4 latitudinal gradient (w600 km of
coastline) inWestern Australia. The ecological patterns of algal-associated gastropods responded strongly
to the presence of algal habitats with different physical structure at small spatial scales. Importantly,
differences in assemblage structure (e.g. differences in total abundances) between habitats across the
latitudinal gradient were especially accentuated on the in-shore reefs compared with the off-shore reefs,
where a general amelioration of differences between habitats was observed, probably associated with
a more widespread effect of strongerwave forces across habitats. Overall, red algae supported higher total
abundances and species richness (per algal weight) compared to the other algal habitats, particularly on inshore
reefs. Patterns for individual species were considerably location-dependent, reflecting the natural
variability of species across geographical gradients. In contrast, patterns at the assemblage-level were
consistent, providing evidence for the existence of general rules underlying the assemblage-level
organization of mobile invertebrates on subtidal reefs across this geographical gradient.
Keywords :
spatial patternsreefsalgal habitatsgastropodswave exposureWestern Australia
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science