Abstract

The present study aims to detect functional diversity as well as functional redundancy patterns of soft bottom benthic communities in relation to the prevailing environmental factors, across several brackish water areas. We further tested whether differences in spatial scale can account for the possible variability in functional trait distribution, as well as for the local community assembly processes driven by species functional traits. Our main results suggested that environmental variation induces a large amount of variability in functional trait distribution at local and regional scale, a result which underscores the importance of habitat and environmental variation in the functioning of soft sediments in brackish areas. Conversely to functional diversity, functional redundancy remained invariable in both local and regional scales, therefore acting as an insurance against the enhanced environmental variability and maintaining ecosystem processes and services. Our findings led us also to conclude that environmental factors control the distribution of certain functional traits thus acting as environmental filters, in both local and regional scales. On the other hand, dominant species interactions accounted for the reduced levels of functional divergence at the less confined brackish water areas. This finding supported the view that interactions among dominant species can potentially induce negative effects on the functionality of brackish water soft sediments. From all the above, it is reasonable to assume that community shaping and functioning of the examined brackish water areas are governed by both biotic interactions and environmental filters, which are acting simultaneously at varying degrees of influence.

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