Back to Search Start Over

Life goes on: Spatial heterogeneity promotes biodiversity in an urbanized coastal marine ecosystem.

Authors :
McIlroy, Shelby E.
Guibert, Isis
Archana, Anand
Chung, Wing Yi Haze
Duffy, J. Emmett
Gotama, Rinaldi
Hui, Jerome
Knowlton, Nancy
Leray, Matthieu
Meyer, Chris
Panagiotou, Gianni
Paulay, Gustav
Russell, Bayden
Thompson, Philip D.
Baker, David M.
Source :
Global Change Biology; Apr2024, Vol. 30 Issue 4, p1-17, 17p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Both human populations and marine biodiversity are concentrated along coastlines, with growing conservation interest in how these ecosystems can survive intense anthropogenic impacts. Tropical urban centres provide valuable research opportunities because these megacities are often adjacent to mega‐diverse coral reef systems. The Pearl River Delta is a prime exemplar, as it encompasses one of the most densely populated and impacted regions in the world and is located just northwest of the Coral Triangle. However, the spatial and taxonomic complexity of this biodiversity, most of which is small, cryptic in habitat and poorly known, make comparative analyses challenging. We deployed standardized settlement structures at seven sites differing in the intensity of human impacts and used COI metabarcoding to characterize benthic biodiversity, with a focus on metazoans. We found a total of 7184 OTUs, with an average of 665 OTUs per sampling unit; these numbers exceed those observed in many previous studies using comparable methods, despite the location of our study in an urbanized environment. Beta diversity was also high, with 52% of the OTUs found at just one site. As expected, we found that the sites close to point sources of pollution had substantially lower diversity (44% less) relative to sites bathed in less polluted oceanic waters. However, the polluted sites contributed substantially to the total animal diversity of the region, with 25% of all OTUs occurring only within polluted sites. Further analysis of Arthropoda, Annelida and Mollusca showed that phylogenetic clustering within a site was common, suggesting that environmental filtering reduced biodiversity to a subset of lineages present within the region, a pattern that was most pronounced in polluted sites and for the Arthropoda. The water quality gradients surrounding the PRD highlight the unique role of in situ studies for understanding the impacts of complex urbanization pressures on biodiversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13541013
Volume :
30
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Global Change Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176866698
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.17248