6 research outputs found

    Depth and grazing intensity are the main drivers of subtidal hardground benthic community structure on tropical south Atlantic reefs

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    Marine hardground bottom (subtidal) benthic (sessile) communities (HBBC) are subjected to various biotic, abiotic, and anthropogenic factors that can vary over space and time and interact with one another. To evaluate the main drivers of the structure of HBBC in a large tropical bay in the southwest Atlantic (Ilha Grande Bay, Brazil), a total of 98 HBBC were sampled using visually estimated quadrats. Ten variables (depth, grazing intensity, irradiance, temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen, nutrients (nitrite, nitrate, and phosphate), and chlorophyll a concentrations) were also measured. A total of 74 main space-occupying taxon/functional groups were recorded which fell into six major HBBC groups. These were organized by depth/irradiance and grazing intensities which explained part of the HBBC variation: (a) Communities dominated by zoantharians occurred in the shallow, highest irradiance sites; (b) foliose and erect algae were inversely related to depth and grazing intensity; (c) crustose coralline algae dominated at greater depths and/or under higher grazing intensity; (d) zooxanthellate corals were associated with shallower and heterotrophic invertebrates with deeper stations; (e) photosynthetically efficient algae were associated with deeper stations, with more encrusting forms under higher grazing intensities; and (f) multi-species turf-forming algae were ubiquitous (did not present association with any of the measured variables). As communities’ components and main structuring factors were similar to those found in coral reefs, these communities represent compatible receptor habitats for poleward escape, migration, and range extension under the present global warming scenario
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