Abstract

Despite the many functions that mobile invertebrates serve in marine ecosystems, these assemblages remain relatively understudied. This study utilized artificial settling surfaces to determine how mobile invertebrate assemblages vary along a latitudinal gradient encompassing ~1100km of the Western Australian (WA) coast. We examined the structure of both ‘whole assemblages’ at a coarse taxonomic level and a subset of the assemblage (crabs) at the species level, across six locations and over two sampling periods. Assemblage structure differed significantly between locations and a moderately strong correlation with latitude was detected. More evident, was distinct partitioning between assemblages at ‘warm-water’ locations (23–24.5°S) and ‘temperate’ locations (28–33°S). This division in assemblage structure was consistent between sampling periods and taxonomic resolutions and corresponds to shifts in dominant biogenic habitat along the coast (coral vs. macrophyte). The abundances of some of the dominant crab species suggested discrete, unimodal distribution relationships with latitude/temperature, a pattern observed previously for macroalgae and fish in WA. The regional-scale patterns of mobile invertebrate assemblage structure presented here will contribute to forming a benchmark against which to detect future ecological change.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call