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Food-Web Structure of Seagrass Communities across Different Spatial Scales and Human Impacts

Seagrass beds provide important habitat for a wide range of marine species but are threatened by multiple human impacts in coastal waters. Although seagrass communities have been well-studied in the field, a quantification of their food-web structure and functioning, and how these change across spac...

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Autores principales: Coll, Marta, Schmidt, Allison, Romanuk, Tamara, Lotze, Heike K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3141067/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21811637
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0022591
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author Coll, Marta
Schmidt, Allison
Romanuk, Tamara
Lotze, Heike K.
author_facet Coll, Marta
Schmidt, Allison
Romanuk, Tamara
Lotze, Heike K.
author_sort Coll, Marta
collection PubMed
description Seagrass beds provide important habitat for a wide range of marine species but are threatened by multiple human impacts in coastal waters. Although seagrass communities have been well-studied in the field, a quantification of their food-web structure and functioning, and how these change across space and human impacts has been lacking. Motivated by extensive field surveys and literature information, we analyzed the structural features of food webs associated with Zostera marina across 16 study sites in 3 provinces in Atlantic Canada. Our goals were to (i) quantify differences in food-web structure across local and regional scales and human impacts, (ii) assess the robustness of seagrass webs to simulated species loss, and (iii) compare food-web structure in temperate Atlantic seagrass beds with those of other aquatic ecosystems. We constructed individual food webs for each study site and cumulative webs for each province and the entire region based on presence/absence of species, and calculated 16 structural properties for each web. Our results indicate that food-web structure was similar among low impact sites across regions. With increasing human impacts associated with eutrophication, however, food-web structure show evidence of degradation as indicated by fewer trophic groups, lower maximum trophic level of the highest top predator, fewer trophic links connecting top to basal species, higher fractions of herbivores and intermediate consumers, and higher number of prey per species. These structural changes translate into functional changes with impacted sites being less robust to simulated species loss. Temperate Atlantic seagrass webs are similar to a tropical seagrass web, yet differed from other aquatic webs, suggesting consistent food-web characteristics across seagrass ecosystems in different regions. Our study illustrates that food-web structure and functioning of seagrass habitats change with human impacts and that the spatial scale of food-web analysis is critical for determining results.
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spelling pubmed-31410672011-08-02 Food-Web Structure of Seagrass Communities across Different Spatial Scales and Human Impacts Coll, Marta Schmidt, Allison Romanuk, Tamara Lotze, Heike K. PLoS One Research Article Seagrass beds provide important habitat for a wide range of marine species but are threatened by multiple human impacts in coastal waters. Although seagrass communities have been well-studied in the field, a quantification of their food-web structure and functioning, and how these change across space and human impacts has been lacking. Motivated by extensive field surveys and literature information, we analyzed the structural features of food webs associated with Zostera marina across 16 study sites in 3 provinces in Atlantic Canada. Our goals were to (i) quantify differences in food-web structure across local and regional scales and human impacts, (ii) assess the robustness of seagrass webs to simulated species loss, and (iii) compare food-web structure in temperate Atlantic seagrass beds with those of other aquatic ecosystems. We constructed individual food webs for each study site and cumulative webs for each province and the entire region based on presence/absence of species, and calculated 16 structural properties for each web. Our results indicate that food-web structure was similar among low impact sites across regions. With increasing human impacts associated with eutrophication, however, food-web structure show evidence of degradation as indicated by fewer trophic groups, lower maximum trophic level of the highest top predator, fewer trophic links connecting top to basal species, higher fractions of herbivores and intermediate consumers, and higher number of prey per species. These structural changes translate into functional changes with impacted sites being less robust to simulated species loss. Temperate Atlantic seagrass webs are similar to a tropical seagrass web, yet differed from other aquatic webs, suggesting consistent food-web characteristics across seagrass ecosystems in different regions. Our study illustrates that food-web structure and functioning of seagrass habitats change with human impacts and that the spatial scale of food-web analysis is critical for determining results. Public Library of Science 2011-07-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3141067/ /pubmed/21811637 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0022591 Text en Coll et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Coll, Marta
Schmidt, Allison
Romanuk, Tamara
Lotze, Heike K.
Food-Web Structure of Seagrass Communities across Different Spatial Scales and Human Impacts
title Food-Web Structure of Seagrass Communities across Different Spatial Scales and Human Impacts
title_full Food-Web Structure of Seagrass Communities across Different Spatial Scales and Human Impacts
title_fullStr Food-Web Structure of Seagrass Communities across Different Spatial Scales and Human Impacts
title_full_unstemmed Food-Web Structure of Seagrass Communities across Different Spatial Scales and Human Impacts
title_short Food-Web Structure of Seagrass Communities across Different Spatial Scales and Human Impacts
title_sort food-web structure of seagrass communities across different spatial scales and human impacts
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3141067/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21811637
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0022591
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