Abstract

Significant spatial variation in species composition of microphytobenthos often occurs at scales of decimetres. This microscale variation is typically more connected with dispersal-related events than to environmental factors. In this study, 4 microscale transects were delimited at 4 temperate lowland peat bog localities to investigate spatial and temporal microscale variations in benthic desmids (Desmidiales, Viridiplantae). Significant spatial autocorrelation was detected in most of the transects taken 3 times, in September and December 2010 and March 2011. The relative abundance of species data produced more pronounced spatial patterns than the presence–absence data. Spatial autocorrelation mostly decreased during the winter period, possibly due to meteorological disturbances, resulting in less spatially structured phytobenthic community in the March transects. In most cases, spatial distance accounted for a significant part of the variation in a community structure, even in analyses that controlled for the effects of environmental and temporal factors. This indicated that pure spatial factors should be considered important for structuring phytobenthic communities, even across a temporal time span of 6 months. The reduced data sets that included only 25 % of the most frequented species produced very similar patterns in spatial and temporal autocorrelation as the full data sets. Consequently, we concluded that microscale variation of benthic desmids may be sufficiently represented by dynamics of the common species.

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