Abstract

Taxonomic sufficiency has been used mainly to assess benthic condition, based on the assumption that taxa can be identified to a taxonomic level higher than the species level without losing the ability to detect changes related to pollution stress. Identifying taxa to a higher level reduces the expertise and time needed to identify organisms and consequently allows increased spatial and temporal replication. The usefulness of taxonomic sufficiency for typology (identification of water body types) was examined using the benthic communities of the Mondego River estuary (Portugal). Benthic samples were collected seasonally along the Northern branch of the Mondego River estuary from July 2000 to June 2001 and several environmental parameters were measured simultaneously. Cluster analysis of species data indicated three major ecological groups, mainly related to a saline gradient along the estuary. The same groups were found when taxa were aggregated to higher taxonomic levels (genus, family, order, class), except for the phylum level. The overall spatial pattern was driven by: (1) the dominance of bivalves and the occurrence of rare marine species in the Lower Estuary; (2) the dominance of polychaetes in the Middle Estuary; (3) and the dominance of arthropods in the Upper Estuary. The ability of different taxocenes to discriminate the three ecological groups was also examined. Mollusca and Bivalvia were the only taxocenes producing the same groupings, although other taxocenes (Annelida, Polychaeta, Spionidae, Arthropoda) showed a significant ability to discriminate between all three groups. Compared to using all taxa identified to the lowest possible taxonomic level, our results indicate that for typology (1) several higher taxonomic levels were sufficient (2) while few taxocenes alone were sufficient.

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