Abstract
The long-term variations of two coastal benthic communities (Eastern English Channel, France) were studied between 1979 and 1994 by means of factor correspondence analysis (FCA), trophic structure and rank-frequency diagrams (RFD). FCA identified periods of relative homogeneity and periods of strong variation in the structure of the two communities. The first community, established on heterogeneous sand, showed a multi-annual cycle linked to grain-size variations in the sediment. As passive supplies of organic matter were not important and suspension feeders could hardly live in these conditions, the community remained poor and stable and was dominated by deposit-feeders and carnivores. The other one, a rich and diverse mussel ( Mytilus edulis) bed, showed great variations in the abundance of the main species which generated the enrichment of the community by its suspension-feeding behaviour (biodeposition). Beyond these variations, the community remained stable until 1990 as no continuous trend or permanent change could be seen. Since 1990, no recruitment of M. edulis occurred and the relative dominance of suspension feeders, as well as the number of species, strongly decreased. During the following years, several species of tunicates (sessile suspension feeders with gregarious recruitment) recruited and partly took the ecological niche of M. edulis but they did not induce an increase of biodeposition and the previous richness was not restored. After a strong and rapid shift in the structure, a new equilibrium has been established within the community.
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