Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4550592 Marine Environmental Research 2016 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Spatial variability of macrobenthos in transitional water systems was investigated.•Abundance, diversity and multivariate structure of macrobenthos were considered.•Spatial variability in coastal water and sediment variables were examined.•Faunal spatial patterns found using species and functional groups were consistent.•Total carbon, salinity and silt/clay were the variables best correlated with fauna.

Spatial variability of environmental factors and macrobenthos, using species and functional groups, was examined over the same scales (100s of cm to >100 km) in intertidal sediments of two transitional water systems. The objectives were to test if functional groups were a good species surrogate and explore the relationship between environmental variables and macrobenthos. Environmental variables, diversity and the multivariate assemblage structure showed the highest variability at the scale of 10s of km. However, abundance was more variable at 10s of m. Consistent patterns were achieved using species and functional groups therefore, these may be a good species surrogate. Total carbon, salinity and silt/clay were the strongest correlated with macrobenthic assemblages. Results are valuable for design and interpretation of future monitoring programs including detection of anthropogenic disturbances in transitional systems and propose improvements in environmental variable sampling to refine the assessment of their relationship with biological data across spatial scales.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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