Abstract

Remane’s species-minimum concept, which states that the lowest number of taxa occurs at the horohalinicum (5–8psu), was tested by investigating macroalgal diversity on hard substrates along the natural salinity gradient in the Baltic Sea. Field data on species occurrence and abundance were collected by SCUBA diving along 10 transects of the Finnish, Swedish and German coasts, covering a salinity range from 3.9 to 27psu. Macroalgal species numbers declined steadily with salinity, decreasing until 7.2psu was reached, but in the horohalinicum, a marked reduction of species number and a change in diversity were indicated by the Shannon index and evenness values. The non-linear decrease in macroalgal diversity at 5–8psu and the lack of increase in species numbers at salinities below 5psu imply a restricted applicability of Remane’s species-minimum concept to macroalgae.

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