Abstract

The generality and drivers of rarity, defined along the axes of geographic range, population size and habitat specificity, have received considerable scientific attention for well over a century. Yet, studies that examine rarity holistically among these three attributes are limited, especially among invertebrate and marine taxa. The perceived paradox of deep‐sea species, with often low population size but large geographic ranges, remains poorly resolved and understood. Here I assess seven forms of rarity and their drivers in deep‐sea bivalves across the Atlantic Ocean. Rarity appears to be a common trait among deep‐sea bivalves, with nearly 85% of the species exhibiting some form of rarity. Bivalves also showed a strong bimodal pattern of very common and very rare species. Geographic range, population size and habitat specificity were all heavily right skewed. Taxonomic superfamilies, body size, energy availability, temperature, depth and latitude, all significantly predicted geographic range, population size and habitat specificity. In a few cases, these patterns were counter to theoretical expectations. The drivers of rarity appear to be predictable from knowledge of the intrinsic biological and extrinsic environmental context of the species. These findings have major implications for deep‐sea conversation, especially as anthropogenic threats are increasing.

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