Abstract

Predictable patterns of species number have been observed in relation to habitat size, habitat heterogeneity and environmental conditions, while patterns in relative abundance of species have been examined for few communities and no assembly rules have been established. We studied communities of attached macroalgae in 61 individual sites located in four different areas; the inner, middle and outer parts of three neighbouring low-tidal estuaries and the adjacent open waters of the Kattegat, Denmark. The objectives were to determine (1) the relationships of species number and rank-abundance to the environmental conditions, and (2) the importance of scale and the consistency of species rank number at the sites for these relationships. We found that species number increased significantly from the inner estuaries to the open coastal waters along with decreasing nutrient concentrations. Turnover (β) diversity was lowest in the open waters suggesting that species composition was more similar among samples there than in the estuaries. Rank-abundance curves did not differ between depth intervals and individual sites across the environmental gradients. However, the summed rank-abundance patterns for two sites showed significantly steeper initial slopes and dominance of few species (i.e., low evenness) in the inner estuaries than in open waters. This pattern was due to high rank consistency of dominant species among sites in the inner estuaries. In open waters rank consistency was low, and the summed abundance across sites showed an even abundance of species. The results imply that the scale of the study and the community variability observed at that particular scale, is the main determinant of abundance patterns.

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