INVESTIGADORES
BIGATTI Gregorio
artículos
Título:
Patterns of Spatial Variation of Assemblages Associated with Intertidal Rocky Shores: A Global Perspective.
Autor/es:
CRUZ-MOTTA J.J., ; P. MILOSLAVICH, G. ; PALOMO, K. ; IKEN, B. ; KONAR, G. ; POHLE, T. ; TROTT, L. ; BENEDETTI-CECCHI, C. ; HERRERA, A. ; HERNANDEZ, A. ; SARDI, A. ; BUENO, J. ; CASTILLO, E.; KLEIN, E. ; GUERRA-CASTRO, J.; GOBIN, ; D. I. GOMEZ, ; R.L RIOSMENA-RODRIGUEZ, ; A. MEAD, ; G. BIGATTI, ; AL KNOWLTON, ; SHIRAYAMA, Y.
Revista:
PLOS ONE
Editorial:
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Referencias:
Año: 2010 vol. 5 p. 1 - 10
ISSN:
1932-6203
Resumen:
Assemblages associated with intertidal rocky shores were examined for large scale distribution patterns with specificemphasis on identifying latitudinal trends of species richness and taxonomic distinctiveness. Seventy-two sites distributedaround the globe were evaluated following the standardized sampling protocol of the Census of Marine Life NaGISA project(www.nagisa.coml.org). There were no clear patterns of standardized estimators of species richness along latitudinalgradients or among Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs); however, a strong latitudinal gradient in taxonomic composition (i.e.,proportion of different taxonomic groups in a given sample) was observed. Environmental variables related to naturalinfluences were strongly related to the distribution patterns of the assemblages on the LME scale, particularly photoperiod,sea surface temperature (SST) and rainfall. In contrast, no environmental variables directly associated with human influences(with the exception of the inorganic pollution index) were related to assemblage patterns among LMEs. Correlations of thenatural assemblages with either latitudinal gradients or environmental variables were equally strong suggesting that neitherneutral models nor models based solely on environmental variables sufficiently explain spatial variation of theseassemblages at a global scale. Despite the data shortcomings in this study (e.g., unbalanced sample distribution), we showthe importance of generating biological global databases for the use in large-scale diversity comparisons of rocky intertidalassemblages to stimulate continued sampling and analyses.