Variation in community structure across vertical intertidal stress gradients: how does it compare with horizontal variation at different scales?

In rocky intertidal habitats, the pronounced increase in environmental stress from low to high elevations greatly affects community structure, that is, the combined measure of species identity and their relative abundance. Recent studies have shown that ecological variation also occurs along the coa...

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Main Authors: Nelson Valdivia, Ricardo A Scrosati, Markus Molis, Amanda S Knox
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3161098?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-c0a0c18a37004b068cca6f452f05fa412020-11-25T01:49:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0168e2406210.1371/journal.pone.0024062Variation in community structure across vertical intertidal stress gradients: how does it compare with horizontal variation at different scales?Nelson ValdiviaRicardo A ScrosatiMarkus MolisAmanda S KnoxIn rocky intertidal habitats, the pronounced increase in environmental stress from low to high elevations greatly affects community structure, that is, the combined measure of species identity and their relative abundance. Recent studies have shown that ecological variation also occurs along the coastline at a variety of spatial scales. Little is known, however, on how vertical variation compares with horizontal variation measured at increasing spatial scales (in terms of sampling interval). Because broad-scale processes can generate geographical patterns in community structure, we tested the hypothesis that vertical ecological variation is higher than fine-scale horizontal variation but lower than broad-scale horizontal variation. To test this prediction, we compared the variation in community structure across intertidal elevations on rocky shores of Helgoland Island with independent estimates of horizontal variation measured at the scale of patches (quadrats separated by 10s of cm), sites (quadrats separated by a few m), and shores (quadrats separated by 100s to 1000s of m). The multivariate analyses done on community structure supported our prediction. Specifically, vertical variation was significantly higher than patch- and site-scale horizontal variation but lower than shore-scale horizontal variation. Similar patterns were found for the variation in abundance of foundation taxa such as Fucus spp. and Mastocarpus stellatus, suggesting that the effects of these canopy-forming algae, known to function as ecosystem engineers, may explain part of the observed variability in community structure. Our findings suggest that broad-scale processes affecting species performance increase ecological variability relative to the pervasive fine-scale patchiness already described for marine coasts and the well known variation caused by vertical stress gradients. Our results also indicate that experimental research aiming to understand community structure on marine shores should benefit from applying a multi-scale approach.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3161098?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nelson Valdivia
Ricardo A Scrosati
Markus Molis
Amanda S Knox
spellingShingle Nelson Valdivia
Ricardo A Scrosati
Markus Molis
Amanda S Knox
Variation in community structure across vertical intertidal stress gradients: how does it compare with horizontal variation at different scales?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nelson Valdivia
Ricardo A Scrosati
Markus Molis
Amanda S Knox
author_sort Nelson Valdivia
title Variation in community structure across vertical intertidal stress gradients: how does it compare with horizontal variation at different scales?
title_short Variation in community structure across vertical intertidal stress gradients: how does it compare with horizontal variation at different scales?
title_full Variation in community structure across vertical intertidal stress gradients: how does it compare with horizontal variation at different scales?
title_fullStr Variation in community structure across vertical intertidal stress gradients: how does it compare with horizontal variation at different scales?
title_full_unstemmed Variation in community structure across vertical intertidal stress gradients: how does it compare with horizontal variation at different scales?
title_sort variation in community structure across vertical intertidal stress gradients: how does it compare with horizontal variation at different scales?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description In rocky intertidal habitats, the pronounced increase in environmental stress from low to high elevations greatly affects community structure, that is, the combined measure of species identity and their relative abundance. Recent studies have shown that ecological variation also occurs along the coastline at a variety of spatial scales. Little is known, however, on how vertical variation compares with horizontal variation measured at increasing spatial scales (in terms of sampling interval). Because broad-scale processes can generate geographical patterns in community structure, we tested the hypothesis that vertical ecological variation is higher than fine-scale horizontal variation but lower than broad-scale horizontal variation. To test this prediction, we compared the variation in community structure across intertidal elevations on rocky shores of Helgoland Island with independent estimates of horizontal variation measured at the scale of patches (quadrats separated by 10s of cm), sites (quadrats separated by a few m), and shores (quadrats separated by 100s to 1000s of m). The multivariate analyses done on community structure supported our prediction. Specifically, vertical variation was significantly higher than patch- and site-scale horizontal variation but lower than shore-scale horizontal variation. Similar patterns were found for the variation in abundance of foundation taxa such as Fucus spp. and Mastocarpus stellatus, suggesting that the effects of these canopy-forming algae, known to function as ecosystem engineers, may explain part of the observed variability in community structure. Our findings suggest that broad-scale processes affecting species performance increase ecological variability relative to the pervasive fine-scale patchiness already described for marine coasts and the well known variation caused by vertical stress gradients. Our results also indicate that experimental research aiming to understand community structure on marine shores should benefit from applying a multi-scale approach.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3161098?pdf=render
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