Otávio César Marchetti, Isadora Drovandi Rodrigues, Felipe Theocharides Oricchio, Gustavo Muniz Dias
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Effect of habitat topography on the structure and diversity of benthic communities across five marinas from the southwestern Atlantic Ocean
Marine urbanization promotes the addition of hard substrata that barely resembles natural substrate nearby. We manipulated habitat topography in five marinas across one of the most populated regions from the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean to describe the effect of habitat complexity on the diversity of benthic communities across sites with distinct conditions and biotas. The highest biomass was found in the two marinas under high pollution and freshwater disturbances, regardless of habitat complexity. Habitat topography did not affect species richness but determined the structure of sessile communities in all marinas. The structure of mobile communities was affected only in the most diverse site, increasing the abundance of isopods. In general, fragile ascidians, hydrozoans, and non-calcified polychaetes dominated complex habitats, while structurally defended animals such as barnacles, serpulids, and encrusting bryozoans dominated simple habitats, suggesting that dominant species are selected by habitat complexity based on their morphological traits. However, the final community structure was also determined by differences across marinas, suggesting that the effect of increasing habitat topography is mostly site-specific. Therefore, strategies to minimize the disparity between natural and artificial habitats must consider historic local community and a multiple stressors scenario.
期刊介绍:
Marine Ecology publishes original contributions on the structure and dynamics of marine benthic and pelagic ecosystems, communities and populations, and on the critical links between ecology and the evolution of marine organisms.
The journal prioritizes contributions elucidating fundamental aspects of species interaction and adaptation to the environment through integration of information from various organizational levels (molecules to ecosystems) and different disciplines (molecular biology, genetics, biochemistry, physiology, marine biology, natural history, geography, oceanography, palaeontology and modelling) as viewed from an ecological perspective. The journal also focuses on population genetic processes, evolution of life histories, morphological traits and behaviour, historical ecology and biogeography, macro-ecology and seascape ecology, palaeo-ecological reconstruction, and ecological changes due to introduction of new biota, human pressure or environmental change.
Most applied marine science, including fisheries biology, aquaculture, natural-products chemistry, toxicology, and local pollution studies lie outside the scope of the journal. Papers should address ecological questions that would be of interest to a worldwide readership of ecologists; papers of mostly local interest, including descriptions of flora and fauna, taxonomic descriptions, and range extensions will not be considered.