Resilience of coastal marine metacommunities to increasing hydraulic connectivity

Author:

Smeti E1,Tsirtsis G2,Meziti A23,Kormas KA34,Danielidis DB5,Roelke DL6,Spatharis S7

Affiliation:

1. Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, Institute of Marine Biological Resources & Inland Waters, 19013 Anavissos, Attica, Greece

2. University of the Aegean, Department of Marine Sciences, 81100 Mytilene, Greece

3. University of Thessaly, Department of Ichthyology & Aquatic Environment, 3844 46 Volos, Greece

4. Agricultural Development Institute, University Research and Innovation Centre ‘IASON’, 382 21 Volos, Greece

5. National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Faculty of Biology, Department of Ecology and Systematics, 15784 Athens, Greece

6. Texas A&M University at Galveston, Department of Marine Biology, Galveston, TX 77554, USA

7. University of Glasgow, School of Biodiversity One Health and Veterinary Medicine, G12 8QQ, Scotland, UK

Abstract

Coastal ecosystems typically comprise water patches of different salinities that host distinct communities of species. This salinity-driven heterogeneity can be vulnerable to changes in between-patch connectivity due to altered water levels. Despite the potentially grave implications for higher trophic levels, the impact of increased connectivity on phytoplankton assemblages is largely unknown. Here, we investigate the effect of increasing connectivity on assemblage resistance and recovery along a strong salinity gradient of 40-61 psu. We deployed mesocosms within a saltwork system and hydraulically connected enclosures of 3 salinity levels at 3 connectivity levels. We hypothesized that assemblage composition of high salinity would be more resistant to press invasions during connectivity; however, high connectivity would decrease compositional resistance and recovery irrespective of salinity. We found that high salinity assemblages were indeed more resistant and recovered better at low connectivity. High connectivity also impacted the function of high salinity assemblages by replacing large diatoms with small flagellates, preventing assemblage recovery. Counterintuitively, low salinity assemblage composition recovered better at higher connectivity, and this was attributed to rescue effects of rarer and stenohaline species within a more variable nutrient environment. Here, we show that normal (i.e. marine) salinity assemblages are vulnerable to anticipated changes in coastal hydrological regimes whereas higher salinity assemblages are impacted above a certain connectivity threshold.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

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