Abstract

Infauna are an ecologically important component of marine benthic ecosystems and are the most common faunal assemblage used to assess habitat quality. Compared to the shallower waters of the continental shelf, less is known about the benthic fauna from the continental slope, especially how the communities are structured by natural gradients and anthropogenic stressors. The present study was conceived to rectify these data gaps and characterize the natural, baseline structure of the benthic infauna of the upper continental slope (200–100 m) of the Southern California Bight. We aggregated benthic infauna, sediment composition, and sediment chemistry data from different surveys across the Southern California Bight region (750 samples from 347 sites) collected between 1972 and 2016. We defined 208 samples to be in reference condition based upon sediment chemistry and proximity to known anthropogenic disturbances. Cluster analysis of the reference samples was used to identify distinct assemblages and the abiotic characteristics associated with each cluster were then used to define habitat characteristics for each assemblage. Three habitats were identified, delineated by geography, depth, and sediment composition. Across the habitats, there were detectable changes in community composition of the non-disturbed fauna through time. However, the uniqueness of the habitats was persistent, as the fauna from each habitat remained taxonomically distinct from irrespective of the decade of their collection. Within each habitat, subtle, assemblage-scale responses to disturbance could be detected, but no consistent patterns could be identified among the component taxa. As with the non-disturbed samples, there were compositional changes in the fauna of the disturbed samples through time. Despite the changes, fauna from disturbed and non-disturbed samples remained taxonomically distinct from each other within each decade of the dataset. After considering both the spatial and temporal patterns in the fauna of slope ecosystem, it became apparent that there was a high degree of stochasticity in the taxonomic organization of all three habitats. This would suggest that the benthic fauna from these communities may be neutrally organized, which in turn poses interesting challenges for future development of condition assessment tools based upon the benthic fauna in these habitats.

Highlights

  • Benthic infauna are a key ecological component of most marine ecosystems

  • Macrobenthic infauna, sediment composition, and sediment chemistry data were aggregated from different surveys across the Southern California Bight region collected between 1972 and 2016, with the largest share of data collected from the mid 1990’s through the 2010’s

  • That scale that was only made possible because the bulk of these data were the product of a collaborative, regional monitoring partnership [Southern California Bight Regional Monitoring Program (Schiff et al, 2016)] that enables consistency in taxonomy, data collection and data quality standards across multiple decades of surveys

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Benthic infauna are a key ecological component of most marine ecosystems. They represent a key trophic link between organic matter production/accumulation in the benthic environment and export to other oceanic environments (Chardy and Dauvin, 1992; Kovecses et al, 2005; Wolkovich et al, 2014). A byproduct of the broad taxonomic and functional diversity of a typical marine benthic assemblage is an broad range in sensitivities to different types of stressors (e.g., Statzner and Bêche, 2010; Oug et al, 2012; DeLong et al, 2018). These characteristics combine to make for relatively predictable community-scale changes in both structure and function when exposed to disturbance (e.g., Pearson and Rosenberg, 1978; Rhoads et al, 1978)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.