Intraspecific Abundance–Occupancy–Patchiness Relations in the Intertidal Benthic Macrofauna of a Cool-Temperate North Sea Mudflat

The macroecological variable of patchiness (Lloyd’s I p index of patchiness, P ) has recently been shown to be related inter- and intraspecifically to those of abundance (numbers m −2 , A ), and occupancy (% occurrence in samples, O ) in lower latitude seagrass macrofaunas. For the first time in hig...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEstuaries and coasts Vol. 45; no. 3; pp. 827 - 838
Main Author Barnes, R. S. K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Springer US 01.05.2022
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:The macroecological variable of patchiness (Lloyd’s I p index of patchiness, P ) has recently been shown to be related inter- and intraspecifically to those of abundance (numbers m −2 , A ), and occupancy (% occurrence in samples, O ) in lower latitude seagrass macrofaunas. For the first time in higher latitudes, intraspecific relationships between three spatial variables were investigated in the intertidal mudflat macrobenthos of the Scolt Head barrier island, southern North Sea (53° N, 01° E). Sampling was conducted between early July and late September 2009–2013 using 710-µm mesh for sample processing. Strong positive interspecific A - O and negative interspecific P - O and P - A relationships were present. Two of the most numerous and widespread assemblage components, however, occurred with effectively constant occupancy ( Peringia ulvae , 100%, and Tubificoides benedii , 93%) across the whole 20-ha locality and therefore could not show intraspecific relationships of occupancy with other macroecological metrics. These two apart, only one other dominant species failed to show a significant positive intraspecific A - O relationship; no species showed significant P - A relations of any form; and only two showed the negative P - O ones that have been described elsewhere. The intraspecific A - O patterns appear to contrast with those of an earlier study at another North Sea locality (the Dutch Wadden Sea), although differences are more apparent than real, but the Scolt Head fauna showed fewer intraspecific P - O and P - A relations than those characterising similar circumstances in the two lower-latitude localities previously investigated. Neither developmental mode nor variation in local abundance appears to influence these patterns. A - O - P relations therefore seem widespread but may be subject to latitudinal modification.
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ISSN:1559-2723
1559-2731
DOI:10.1007/s12237-021-00998-z