Abstract

There is still limited understanding of the processes underlying benthic species dynamics in marine coastal habitats, which are of disproportionate importance in terms of productivity and biodiversity. The life-history traits of long-lived benthic species in these habitats are particularly poorly documented. In this study, we assessed decadal patterns of population dynamics for ten sponge and anthozoan species that play key structural roles in coralligenous outcrops (∼25 m depth) in two areas of the NW Mediterranean Sea. This study was based on examination of a unique long-term photographic series, which allowed analysis of population dynamics over extensive spatial and time spans for the very first time. Specifically, 671 individuals were censused annually over periods of 25-, 15-, and 5-years. This long-term study quantitatively revealed a common life-history pattern among the ten studied species, despite the fact they present different growth forms. Low mortality rates (3.4% yr−1 for all species combined) and infrequent recruitment events (mean value of 3.1±0.5 SE recruits yr−1) provided only a very small fraction of the new colonies required to maintain population sizes. Overall, annual mortality and recruitment rates did not differ significantly among years; however, some species displayed important mortality events and recruitment pulses, indicating variability among species. Based on the growth rates of these 10 species, we projected their longevity and, obtained a mean estimated age of 25–200 years. Finally, the low to moderate turnover rates (mean value 0.80% yr−1) observed among the coralligenous species were in agreement with their low dynamics and persistence. These results offer solid baseline data and reveal that these habitats are among the most vulnerable to the current increases of anthropogenic disturbances.

Highlights

  • Ecosystems worldwide are changing as a result of a number of natural drivers and the effects of myriad anthropogenic activities [1], [2], [3]

  • In the Mediterranean Sea, coralligenous outcrops are of special concern, as they represent one of the most important hotspot for species diversity in the Mediterranean Sea, are of great structural complexity and are dominated by long-lived species [11], [12,13]

  • The present study addresses the population dynamics over decades of ten structural sessile species dwelling on coralligenous outcrops (,25 m depth) in two areas in the NW Mediterranean Sea: the Riou Archipelago (Provence coast, SE France) and the Medes Islands (Catalan coast, NE Spain)

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Summary

Introduction

Ecosystems worldwide are changing as a result of a number of natural drivers and the effects of myriad anthropogenic activities [1], [2], [3]. The increases in the impacts of these activities (e.g. overexploitation, habitat modification, effects of climate change) raise concerns about the capacity of ecosystems to absorb multiple disturbances occurring over short time periods [4], [5], [6]. In the Mediterranean Sea, coralligenous outcrops are of special concern, as they represent one of the most important hotspot for species diversity in the Mediterranean Sea (harboring around 20% of Mediterranean species), are of great structural complexity and are dominated by long-lived species [11], [12,13]. Coralligenous outcrops are increasingly suffering impacts of a range of anthropogenic disturbances (e.g., fishing activities, pollution, increases of sedimentation, introduction of invasive species, climate change) [14], [15], [16], [17], [18]

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