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Effect of Depth across a Latitudinal Gradient in the Structure of Rhodolith Seabeds and Associated Biota across the Eastern Atlantic Ocean

Authors :
Pérez Peris, Inés
Navarro-Mayoral, Sandra
Cosme De Esteban, Marcial
Tuya, F.
Peña, Viviana
Bárbara, Ignacio
Neves, Pedro A.
Ribeiro, Cláudia
Abreu, António
Grall, Jacques
Espino, Fernando
Bosch Guerra, Néstor Echedey
Haroun, R.
Otero Ferrer, Francisco J.
Pérez Peris, Inés
Navarro-Mayoral, Sandra
Cosme De Esteban, Marcial
Tuya, F.
Peña, Viviana
Bárbara, Ignacio
Neves, Pedro A.
Ribeiro, Cláudia
Abreu, António
Grall, Jacques
Espino, Fernando
Bosch Guerra, Néstor Echedey
Haroun, R.
Otero Ferrer, Francisco J.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

[Abstract] Rhodolith seabeds are ‘ecosystem engineers’ composed of free-living calcareous red macroalgae, which create extensive marine habitats. This study addressed how depth influenced the structure (size and morphology) of rhodoliths and the abundance of associated floral and faunal epibionts across the Eastern Atlantic Ocean. Sampling was carried out at two sites within five regions (Brittany, Galicia, Madeira, Gran Canaria, and Principe Island), from temperate to tropical, covering a latitudinal gradient of 47°, in three depth strata (shallow, intermediate and deep), according to the rhodolith bathymetrical range in each region. Depth typically affected the rhodolith size at all regions; the largest nodules were found in the intermediate and deep strata, while rhodolith sphericity was larger at the shallow depth strata. Higher biomasses of attached macroalgae (epiphytes) were observed at depths where rhodoliths were larger. The abundance of epifauna was variable across regions and depth strata. In general, the occurrence, structure, and abundance of the associated biota across rhodolith habitats were affected by depth, with local variability (i.e., sites within regions) often displaying a more significant influence than the regional (large-scale) variation. Overall, this study showed that the rhodolith morphology and associated epibionts (flora and fauna) were mostly affected by depth, irrespective of latitude.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
1424-2818, http://hdl.handle.net/2183/32925, 10.3390/d15010103, Pérez-Peris, I.; Navarro-Mayoral, S.; de Esteban, M.C.; Tuya, F.; Peña, V.; Barbara, I.; Neves, P.; Ribeiro, C.; Abreu, A.; Grall, J.; Espino, F.; Bosch, N.E.; Haroun, R.; Otero-Ferrer, F. Effect of Depth across a Latitudinal Gradient in the Structure of Rhodolith Seabeds and Associated Biota across the Eastern Atlantic Ocean. Diversity 2023, 15, 103. https://doi.org/10.3390/d15010103, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1382607470
Document Type :
Electronic Resource