4.2 Article

Drivers of deep Mediterranean megabenthos communities along longitudinal and bathymetric gradients

期刊

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
卷 439, 期 -, 页码 181-U219

出版社

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps09333

关键词

Deep-sea; Mediterranean; Megafauna; Environmental factors; POC; Biodiversity

资金

  1. European Science Foundation [CTM2007-28739-E]
  2. CICYT [CTM2007-66316-C02/MAR]
  3. European Community [226354]
  4. GRACCIE-CONSOLIDER [CSD2007-00067]
  5. REDECO [CTM2008-04973-E/MAR]
  6. Generalitat de Catalunya [2009 SGR 1305]
  7. Spanish Research Council (CSIC), Spain [JAE-PRE-2008, JAE-DOC-2008]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The Mediterranean deep sea, being isothermal and longitudinally trophic-graded, is an optimal natural benchmark to test for macro-ecological patterns of species distribution. The relevance of environment-biota interactions on deep-sea megafauna in the Mediterranean Sea, a matter still neglected, is addressed here along longitudinal and bathymetric axes. Benthic and nektobenthic megafauna were collected in the 3 basins of the Mediterranean: the western (Catalan Sea and southern Balearic), central (western Ionian) and eastern (south of Crete) basins, with an otter-trawl Maireta system and an Agassiz dredge between 1200 and 4000 m depth. Simultaneously, environmental data were collected on surface production, near-bottom physical parameters, sediment grain size and carbon content. Megafaunal biomass was higher in the Catalan Sea, decreasing eastward and with depth. Species diversity and evenness were relatively constant in the western and central Mediterranean at all depths, whereas these indices decreased with depth in the eastern Mediterranean. beta-diversity analyses indicated a high species turnover between areas. The 3 basins presented significantly different environmental conditions. Sediment particulate organic carbon, surface fluorescence and sediment grain size were the 3 environmental variables that best explained the distribution of megabenthos along the longitudinal Mediterranean axis. These results show that the food supply, from either the surface or from the adjacent deep-sea floor, is critical in regulating the biodiversity of deep-sea Mediterranean megafauna and that this diversity is pooled region-wide. The heterogeneity of resources may be essential in maintaining these high levels of local and regional diversity.

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