Taxonomic surrogates for long-term macrobenthic community monitoring: an application with community trajectory analysis

Author:

Toumi C1,Gauthier O12,Thiébaut É34,Guedes C1,Grall J12

Affiliation:

1. LEMAR, Univ Brest, CNRS, IRD, Ifremer, 29280 Plouzané, France

2. OSU IUEM, Univ Brest, CNRS, IRD, 29280 Plouzané, France

3. Sorbonne Université, CNRS, Station Biologique de Roscoff, UMR7144, Adaptation et Diversité en Milieu Marin, Place Georges Teissier, CS90074, 29688 Roscoff Cedex, France

4. Sorbonne Université, CNRS, OSU STAMAR, UAR2017, 4 Place Jussieu, 75252 Paris Cedex 05, France

Abstract

Biodiversity monitoring, essential to detect impacts of natural and anthropogenic changes on marine ecosystems, is costly, time-consuming and requires high taxonomic expertise. Taxonomic surrogacy might be a solution to overcome these problems and accurately reflect species-level community patterns, but its efficiency has mainly been assessed as taxonomic sufficiency and rarely from long-term monitoring data. Here, the efficiency of subset taxa (i.e. Polychaeta, Crustacea and Mollusca) for summarizing long-term community dynamics was tested in different coastal habitats. The data set came from a yearly long-term macrobenthic monitoring programme (2007-2019) in western France, in 2 biogenic and 2 bare habitats. Community trajectory analysis (CTA), a statistical approach allowing for quantitative measures and comparisons of temporal trajectories, was used to test for similitudes between overall community, subset-taxa and non-subset-taxa dynamics. Polychaeta best reflected the spatial diversity of the different sites as well as the temporal dynamics of the non-Polychaeta species, with more efficiency in biogenic compared to bare habitats. Our study confirmed that the subset-taxon method may reflect long-term benthic habitat dynamics and that CTA is an effective tool to test their efficiency.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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