Drivers of diversity gradients of a highly mobile marine assemblage in a mesoscale seascape

Author:

Svendsen GM123,Ocampo Reinaldo M123,Romero MA123,Williams G24,Magurran A5,Luque S56,González RA123

Affiliation:

1. Centro de Investigación Aplicada y Transferencia Tecnológica en Recursos Marinos Almirante Storni, Güemes 1030, San Antonio Oeste, Río Negro 8520, Argentina

2. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Godoy Cruz 2290, Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires C1425FQB, Argentina

3. Escuela Superior de Ciencias Marinas, Universidad Nacional del Comahue, San Martín 247, San Antonio Oeste, Río Negro 8520, Argentina

4. Centro para el Estudio de Sistemas Marinos, Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Centro Nacional Patagonico, Bv. Almirante Brown 2915, Puerto Madryn, Chubut 9120, Argentina

5. Centre for Biological Diversity, School of Biology, University of St Andrews, Fife KY16 9TH, UK

6. National Research Institute of Science and Technology for Environment and Agriculture, UMR TETIS, Montpellier 34000, France

Abstract

With the unprecedented rate of biodiversity change in the world today, understanding how diversity gradients are maintained at mesoscales is a key challenge. Drawing on information provided by 3 comprehensive fishery surveys (conducted in different years but in the same season and with the same sampling design), we used boosted regression tree (BRT) models in order to relate spatial patterns of α-diversity in a demersal fish assemblage to environmental variables in the San Matias Gulf (Patagonia, Argentina). We found that, over a 4 yr period, persistent diversity gradients of species richness and probability of an interspecific encounter (PIE) were shaped by 3 main environmental gradients: bottom depth, connectivity with the open ocean, and proximity to a thermal front. The 2 main patterns we observed were: a monotonic increase in PIE with proximity to fronts, which had a stronger effect at greater depths; and an increase in PIE when closer to the open ocean (a ‘bay effect’ pattern). The originality of this work resides on the identification of high-resolution gradients in local, demersal assemblages driven by static and dynamic environmental gradients in a mesoscale seascape. The maintenance of environmental gradients, specifically those associated with shared resources and connectivity with an open system, may be key to understanding community stability.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

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

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