Strong correlations of sea ice cover with macroalgal cover along the Antarctic Peninsula: Ramifications for present and future benthic communities

Author:

Amsler Charles D.12ORCID,Amsler Margaret O.12,Klein Andrew G.34,Galloway Aaron W. E.5,Iken Katrin6,McClintock James B.1,Heiser Sabrina17,Lowe Alex T.8,Schram Julie B.59,Whippo Ross5

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Biology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA

2. †Joint first authors

3. 2Department of Geography, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA

4. ‡Lead co-author

5. 3Oregon Institute of Marine Biology, Department of Biology, University of Oregon, Charleston, OR, USA

6. 4College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK, USA

7. 5Current address: Marine Science Institute, University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, TX, USA

8. 6Tennenbaum Marine Observatories Network, Smithsonian Institution, Edgewater, MD, USA

9. 7Current address: Department of Natural Science, University of Alaska Southeast, Juneau, AK, USA

Abstract

Macroalgal forests dominate shallow hard bottom areas along the northern portion of the Western Antarctic Peninsula (WAP). Macroalgal biomass and diversity are known to be dramatically lower in the southern WAP and at similar latitudes around Antarctica, but few reports detail the distributions of macroalgae or associated macroinvertebrates in the central WAP. We used satellite imagery to identify 14 sites differing in sea ice coverage but similar in terms of turbidity along the central WAP. Fleshy macroalgal cover was strongly, negatively correlated with ice concentration, but there was no significant correlation between macroinvertebrate cover and sea ice. Overall community (all organisms) diversity correlated negatively with sea ice concentration and positively with fleshy macroalgal cover, which ranged from around zero at high ice sites to 80% at the lowest ice sites. Nonparametric, multivariate analyses resulted in clustering of macroalgal assemblages across most of the northern sites of the study area, although they differed greatly with respect to macroalgal percent cover and diversity. Analyses of the overall communities resulted in three site clusters corresponding to high, medium, and low fleshy macroalgal cover. At most northern sites, macroalgal cover was similar across depths, but macroalgal and macroinvertebrate distributions suggested increasing effects of ice scour in shallower depths towards the south. Hindcast projections based on correlations of ice and macroalgal cover data suggest that macroalgal cover at many sites could have been varying substantially over the past 40 years. Similarly, based on predicted likely sea ice decreases by 2100, projected increases in macroalgal cover at sites that currently have high ice cover and low macroalgal cover are substantial, often with only a future 15% decrease in sea ice. Such changes would have important ramifications to future benthic communities and to understanding how Antarctic macroalgae may contribute to future blue carbon sequestration.

Publisher

University of California Press

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Geology,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology,Ecology,Environmental Engineering,Oceanography

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