1. Continental-scale patterns in benthic invertebrate diversity: insights from the MacroBen database
- Author
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Jeroen Speybroeck, Monika Kędra, Kendall, Thomas J. Webb, Tim Deprez, Céline Labrune, I.F. Aleffi, A.S.Y. Mackie, E. Vanden Berghe, Stanislav G. Denisenko, João Gil, P. Whomersley, Paul J. Somerfield, R. Palerud, Antoine Grémare, Ioannis Karakassis, K.H. Bryne, A. Bjørgesæter, H. Rumohr, Urszula Janas, Rafael Sardá, S. Dahle, G. Van Hoey, Steven Degraer, Sergi Taboada, Paul E. Renaud, Michael L. Zettler, Jean-Michel Amouroux, Sabine Cochrane, Dirk Fleischer, Jan Marcin Węsławski, Nikolaos Lampadariou, Costas Dounas, Simon Claus, and Maria Włodarska-Kowalczuk
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Biodiversity ,Baltic ,Mediterranean ,Aquatic Science ,computer.software_genre ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Benthos ,Arctic ,11. Sustainability ,Ecosystem ,14. Life underwater ,Taxonomic rank ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Latitude ,Ecology ,Database ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,North Atlantic ,Species diversity ,Cline (biology) ,15. Life on land ,AN, North Atlantic ,Geography ,PN, Arctic ,Habitat ,13. Climate action ,Benthic zone ,MED, Mediterranean ,ANE, Baltic ,Continental shelf ,computer - Abstract
14 páginas, 8 figuras, 4 tablas., Latitudinal clines in species diversity in limnic and terrestrial habitats have been noted for well over a century and are consistent across many taxonomic groups. However, studies in marine systems over the past 2 to 3 decades have yielded equivocal results. We conducted initial analyses of the MarBEF (EU Network of Excellence for Marine Biodiversity and Ecosystem Function) database to test for trends in local and regional diversity over the latitudinal extent of European continental-shelf waters (36° to 81° N). Soft-sediment benthic macrofauna exhibit little evidence of a latitudinal cline in local (α-) diversity measures. Relationships with water depth were relatively strong and complex. Statistically significant latitudinal trends were small and positive, suggesting a modest increase in diversity with latitude once water-depth covariates were removed. These results are consistent regardless of whether subsets of the database were used, replicates were pooled, or component taxonomical groups were evaluated separately. Local and regional diversity measures were significantly and positively correlated. Scientific cooperation through data-sharing is a powerful tool with which to address fundamental ecological and evolutionary questions relating to large-scale patterns and processes., The authors acknowledge the support of the MarBEF Network of Excellence ‘Marine Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning’ which is funded by the Sustainable Development, Global Change and Ecosystems Programme of the European Community’s Sixth Framework Programme (contract no. GOCE-CT-2003-505446). This publication is contribution no. MPS-09014 of MarBEF.
- Published
- 2009