Biodiversity in canopy-forming algae: structure and spatial variability of the Mediterranean Cystoseira assemblages
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2018
abstract:
In the Mediterranean Sea, Cystoseira species are the most important canopy-forming algae in shallow rocky
bottoms, hosting high biodiverse sessile and mobile communities. A large-scale study has been carried out to
investigate the structure of the Cystoseira-dominated assemblages at different spatial scales and to test the hypotheses
that alpha and beta diversity of the assemblages, the abundance and the structure of epiphytic macroalgae,
epilithic macroalgae, sessile macroinvertebrates and mobile macroinvertebrates associated to Cystoseira
beds changed among scales. A hierarchical sampling design in a total of five sites across the Mediterranean Sea
(Croatia, Montenegro, Sardinia, Tuscany and Balearic Islands) was used. A total of 597 taxa associated to
Cystoseira beds were identified with a mean number per sample ranging between 141.1 ± 6.6 (Tuscany) and
173.9 ± 8.5 (Sardinia). A high variability at small (among samples) and large (among sites) scale was generally
highlighted, but the studied assemblages showed different patterns of spatial variability. The relative importance
of the different scales of spatial variability should be considered to optimize sampling designs and propose
monitoring plans of this habitat.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Cystoseira spp.; Spatial scales; Biodiversity; Associated biota; Mediterranean sea
List of contributors:
Pipitone, Carlo
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