Spatial homogeneity of benthic macrofaunal biodiversity across small spatial scales.

R S K Barnes
Author Information
  1. R S K Barnes: Department of Zoology and Entomology, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, 6140, South Africa; Department of Zoology & Conservation Research Institute, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Knysna Basin Project, Knysna, Western Cape, 6570, South Africa. Electronic address: rsb1001@cam.ac.uk.

Abstract

Spatial heterogeneity of biodiversity has been extensively researched, but its spatial homogeneity is virtually unstudied. An intertidal seagrass system at Knysna (South Africa) known to display spatially homogeneous macrobenthic species density at scales ≥0.0275 m was re-investigated at four smaller spatial grains (0.0015 m - 0.0095 m) via a lattice of 8 × 8 stations within a 0.2 ha area. The aim was to investigate the null hypothesis that spatial homogeneity of species density is not a fixed emergent assemblage property but breaks down at small spatial grains within given spatial extents. Although assemblage abundance was significantly heterogeneous at all spatial grains investigated, both species density and functional-group density were significantly homogeneous across those same scales; observed densities not departing from those expected on the basis of independent assortment. Spatial homogeneity is therefore an emergent assemblage property within given spatial extents at Knysna and probably at equivalent sites elsewhere. Equivalent species density in South Africa, Australia and the UK at spatial grains <0.03 m, however, is a scale-related sampling artefact, as may be temporal homogeneity of species density at Knysna over a 3 year period, but close similarity in shape of their species occupancy distributions remains unexplained.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Animals
Aquatic Organisms
Australia
Biodiversity
Ecosystem
Environmental Monitoring
Invertebrates
Population Density
Population Dynamics
South Africa

Word Cloud

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