| Literature DB >> 30955752 |
Romain David1, Maria C Uyarra2, Susana Carvalho3, Holger Anlauf3, Angel Borja2, Abigail E Cahill4, Laura Carugati5, Roberto Danovaro6, Aurélien De Jode1, Jean-Pierre Feral1, Dorian Guillemain1, Marco Lo Martire7, Laure Thierry De Ville D'Avray1, John K Pearman3, Anne Chenuil8.
Abstract
We investigated the validity of Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures (ARMS) as monitoring tools for hard bottoms across a wide geographic and environmental range. We deployed 36 ARMS in the northeast Atlantic, northwest Mediterranean, Adriatic and Red Sea at 7-17 m depth. After 12-16 months, community composition was inferred from photographs, in six plate-faces for each ARMS. Overall, we found a highly significant effect of sea region, site (within seas), and plate-face on community composition. Plate-faces thus represent distinct micro-habitats and provide pseudo-replicates, increasing statistical power. Within each sea region taken individually, there was also a highly significant effect of site and plate-face. Because strong effects were obtained despite the fusion of taxonomic categories at high taxonomic ranks (to ensure comparability among biogeographic provinces), ARMS photo-analysis appears a promising monitoring tool for each sea region. We recommend keeping three ARMS per site and analyzing more numerous sites within a sea region to investigate environmental effects.Entities:
Keywords: Artificial reefs; Biodiversity; Colonization; Hard substrata; Monitoring; Scientific diving; Settlement
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30955752 DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2019.02.066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Pollut Bull ISSN: 0025-326X Impact factor: 5.553