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Terrain, oceanographic, and biological factors underlying the development of Mediterranean coastal animal forests.

Authors :
Pierdomenico, Martina
Pandolfi, Filippo
Mancini, Gianluca
Ventura, Daniele
Falco, Matteo
Belluscio, Andrea
Ardizzone, Giandomenico
Jona-Lasinio, Giovanna
Casoli, Edoardo
Source :
Marine Environmental Research. Sep2024, Vol. 200, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Marine Animal Forests (MAFs) form three-dimensional seascapes and provide substrate and shelter for a variety of species. We investigated the fine-scale distribution pattern of three habitat-forming species of the coastal Mediterranean MAFs: Eunicella cavolini , E. singularis and Paramuricea clavata , and assessed the influence of terrain, oceanographic, and biological factors on their distribution and the formation of MAFs in the central-northern Tyrrhenian Sea. Species presence and abundance were obtained through seafloor HD imagery and were combined with terrain and oceanographic parameters extracted from remote sensing data using distance-based linear modeling (DistLM) and generalized additive model (GAM). The three studied species occurred in all the study areas, with marked differences in their abundance and distribution across the different sites and habitat type, in relation to seafloor characteristics. Specifically, positive relationships emerged between the density of colonies and terrain parameters indicative of high seafloor complexity, such as slope and roughness, as well as the number species structuring MAFs. A clear niche separation for the three species was observed: E. cavolini and P. clavata were reported on coralligenous reefs, and in areas where the seafloor complexity may enhance hydrodynamics and transport of organic matter, while E. singularis was observed on red algal mats at shallower depths. A better understanding of the ecology of these gorgonians, as well as of the drivers determining MAFs formation, represent the first step toward the conservation of these threatened habitats which are currently poorly protected by management and conservation plans. • Terrain, oceanographic, and biological parameters shape fine-scale octocoral distribution patterns. • Eunicella cavolini , E. singularis , and P. clavata exhibit different ecological requirements and habitat selection. • Eunicella cavolini is the most abundant octocoral species in central-northern Tyrrhenian coastal areas. • Seafloor slope and ruggedness increase MAFs' complexity, mainly on coralligenous reefs and emisciaphilic red algal mats. • The patterns here defined can support conservation strategies and restoration efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01411136
Volume :
200
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Marine Environmental Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179060677
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106663