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Microscale dispersion of intertidal seagrass macrofauna
Barnes, R.S.K.; Hamylton, S.M.; Borburgh, L. (2024). Microscale dispersion of intertidal seagrass macrofauna. Mar. Environ. Res. 196: 106385. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106385
In: Marine Environmental Research. Applied Science Publishers: Barking. ISSN 0141-1136; e-ISSN 1879-0291, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keyword
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Abundance; Benthic ecology; Coastal zone; Microdispersion; Microgastropods; Moreton bay; Patchiness; Seagrass; Spatial autocorrelation; Spatial scale

Authors  Top 
  • Barnes, R.S.K.
  • Hamylton, S.M.
  • Borburgh, L.

Abstract

    Previous studies of dispersion of intertidal seagrass-associated macrobenthos in subtropical Moreton Bay, Queensland, showed that patchiness characterised its assemblage abundance with scale-invariant magnitude across areas ranging from >8000 to 0.1 m2. Those studies were here continued across the smaller scales (down to 0.014 m2) arguably more relevant to the dominant 2–10 mm long animals, using 16 replicate blocks of 5x5 contiguous 0.0024 m2 cores nested within the previously studied site. At microscales ≥0.09 m2, the earlier congruence of conclusions derived from patchiness indices and spatial autocorrelation broke down. At >0.014 m2, adjacent points (cores) no longer together formed larger spatial units of related abundance (i.e. showed no autocorrelation), but point abundances were still highly disparate (as reflected in patchiness indices). Congruent indications of patchiness only manifested at 0.014 m2 spatial scales. Assemblage dispersion pattern was partly consequent on one microgastropod (Pseudoliotia) occurring superabundantly in scattered 0.0024 m2 hotspots.


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