Identifying community assembling zones and connectivity pathways in the Tropical Southwestern Atlantic Ocean

Author:

Giachini Tosetto Everton123ORCID,Lett Christophe12,Koch‐Larrouy Ariane234,Costa da Silva Alex3,Neumann‐Leitão Sigrid3,Nogueira Junior Miodeli5,Barrier Nicolas12,Dossa Alina Nathanael367,Tchilibou Michel4,Bauchot Perrine4,Morvan Guillaume4,Bertrand Arnaud1238

Affiliation:

1. MARBEC, University of Montpellier, CNRS, IFREMER, IRD Sète France

2. Institut de Recherche pour le Développement Sète France

3. Departamento de Oceanografia, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco Recife PE Brazil

4. Laboratoire d'Etudes en Géophysique et Océanographie Spatiales (LEGOS) Toulouse France

5. Departamento de Sistemática e Ecologia, Universidade Federal da Paraíba João Pessoa PB Brazil

6. International Chair in Mathematical Physics and Applications (ICMPA), Universite d'Abomey‐Calavi Cotonou Benin

7. Institut de Recherches Halieutiques et Océanologiques du Bénin (IRHOB) Cotonou Benin

8. Departamento de Pesca e Aquicultura, Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco Recife PE Brazil

Abstract

Dispersal is more intense in the ocean than on land because most marine taxa present planktonic life stages that are transported by currents even without specific morphological traits. Thus, species dispersal shapes the distribution of biodiversity along seascapes and drives the composition of biodiversity assemblages. To identify marine assembling zones which characterise spatial areas particularly prone to receive and retain similar animal assemblages from the regional pool of species through passive dispersal, we propose a community‐based approach grounded on Lagrangian simulations of plankton dispersal. This novel approach was applied to communities (coast, outer shelf, slope, seamounts and islands; 0–80 m depth) of the Tropical Southwestern Atlantic and used to assess connectivity pathways. For that, we classified the modelled particles in 15 categories according to biological traits (planktonic life duration and spawning habitat) of representative planktonic communities. From the hierarchical clustering of the multivariate matrix containing the amount of arriving particles from each category in each cell we defined 14 assembling zones. Results highlighted that the assembling zones were mostly shaped by the degree of exposure to currents and the presence of mesoscale features (eddies, recirculation) derived from the interaction between these currents and coastlines. The boundaries, dispersal and connectivity patterns of these zones consistently align with local and regional in situ spatial distribution and abundance patterns of organisms, and provide an appropriate basis for the formulation of ecological hypotheses in the metacommunity framework to be tested in situ, such as the balance between species sorting and mass effect assembling archetypes. This approach, when coupled with the knowledge of other processes shaping communities' structure and distribution, provides important insights for regions and animal groups for which knowledge is limited or absent, and more generally allows for a comprehensive overview of the distribution of distinct communities and connectivity pathways along marine environments.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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