Abstract

Understanding the distribution of biodiversity along environmental gradients allows us to predict how communities respond to natural and anthropogenic impacts. In fjord ecosystems, the overlap of strong salinity and temperature gradients provides us with the opportunity to assess the spatial variation of biodiversity along abiotic environmental gradients. However, in Northern Chilean Patagonia (NCP), a unique and at the same time threatened fjord system, the variation of macrobenthic communities along abiotic environmental gradients is still poorly known. Here, we tested whether macrobenthic species diversity and community structure followed systematic patterns of variation according to the spatial variation in salinity and temperature in Comau Fjord, NCP. A spatially extensive nested sampling design was used to quantify the abundance of subtidal macrobenthic species along the fjord axis (fjord sections: head, middle, and mouth) and a depth gradient (0–21 m). The vertical structure of the water column was strongly stratified at the head of the fjord, characterized by a superficial (depth to ca. 5 m) low-salinity and relatively colder layer that shallowed and decayed toward the mouth of the fjord. The biotic variation followed, in part, this abiotic spatial pattern. Species richness peaked at high salinities (>27 psu) between 5 and 10 m in the head section and between 15 and 21 m in the middle and mouth sections. Diversity and evenness were also highest at these salinities and depth ranges in the head and middle sections, but at shallower depth ranges in the mouth. Information theory-based model selection provided a strong empirical support to the depth- and section-dependent salinity, but not temperature, effects on the three biodiversity metrics. Erect algae and the edible mussel Aulacomya atra numerically dominated in shallow water (0–3 m) at the head and the middle of the fjord, coinciding with the horizontal extension of the low-density water layer—these taxa were further replaced by the crustose algae Lithothamnion sp. and deep-dwelling suspension filters (e.g., corals, polychaetes, and sponges) along depth gradient. Macrobenthic biodiversity correlated, therefore, with the influence of freshwater inputs and the density-driven stratification of the water column in this ecosystem. The spatially variable (across both, horizontal and vertical fjord axes) thresholds observed in our study question the widely accepted pattern of increasing biodiversity with increasing distance from the head of estuarine ecosystems. Finally, non-linear environmental stress models provide us a strong predictive power to understand the responses of these unique ecosystems to natural and anthropogenic environmental changes.

Highlights

  • Biodiversity plays a central role in maintaining the functioning and the goods and services that ecosystems provide to human society (Cardinale et al, 2012)

  • Defining the relationships between abiotic environmental factors and the spatial patterns of biodiversity, in ecosystems characterized by pronounced environmental gradients, is relevant for fundamental ecology and helps to inform ecosystem management and conservation strategies (e.g., Dayton, 1971; Underwood et al, 2000; Palacios et al, 2021)

  • This study revealed that diversity and structure of the macrobenthic subtidal rocky bottom communities of the Comau Fjord are significantly associated with both horizontal and vertical abiotic environmental gradients, salinity, emphasizing their interdependent relationship

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Summary

Introduction

Biodiversity plays a central role in maintaining the functioning and the goods and services that ecosystems provide to human society (Cardinale et al, 2012). Predicting changes in community measures such as species diversity and composition along environmental gradients is, one of the main objectives of ecology (Hutchinson, 1953; Paine et al, 2018). Fjords are ideal natural laboratories to study the effect of abiotic environmental variations on the distribution of benthic communities (Brattegard, 1980; McGovern et al, 2020). Most studies that treat quantitative aspects of fjord benthic biodiversity have been conducted in the northern hemisphere, and the study of southern fjord benthic communities (except for several emergent studies on Antarctic systems) has been focused mostly on species inventories and the description of distribution patterns (e.g., Häussermann et al, 2013; Betti et al, 2017)

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