Predation effects on benthic communities are locally influenced by biological and ecological processes, such as recruitment, competition, and habitat features. We studied three Southwestern Atlantic (SWA) subtropical reef habitats (a rhodolith bed, a coral reef, and a rocky shore) to test if the predation effects on benthic communities overwhelm the habitat-context differences. We deployed panels protected and unprotected from predators on the three habitats, retrieved the panels after 45 days and quantified the recruitment of benthic sessile organisms. Despite differences in the composition of benthic assemblages, the effect of predation was mainly driven by the reduction of the ubiquitous polychaeta Spirorbidae in the three habitats. For the rhodolith bed, which supported a higher taxonomic richness and diversity than the other habitats, predation effects were higher and also driven by the reduction of other taxa. Although we recorded a greater predation effect in more diverse reefs, we attribute this result to small scale traits intrinsic to each habitat instead large-scale oceanographic patterns. Our results add pieces into the debate about how predation affects marine habitats and the importance of small-scale understanding for direct management actions in marine conservation.
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