ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES ON REGIONAL DEEP-SEA SPECIES DIVERSITY 1
Most of our knowledge of biodiversity and its causes in the deep-sea benthos derives from regional-scale sampling studies of the macrofauna. Improved sampling methods and the expansion of investigations into a wide variety of habitats have revolutionized our understanding of the deep sea. Local spec...
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Published in | Annual review of ecology and systematics Vol. 32; no. 1; pp. 51 - 93 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
USA
Annual Reviews
01.11.2001
Palo Alto, CA 94303-0139 4139 El Camino Way, P.O. Box 10139 |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Most of our knowledge of biodiversity and its causes in the deep-sea benthos
derives from regional-scale sampling studies of the macrofauna. Improved
sampling methods and the expansion of investigations into a wide variety of
habitats have revolutionized our understanding of the deep sea. Local species
diversity shows clear geographic variation on spatial scales of 100-1000
km. Recent sampling programs have revealed unexpected complexity in community
structure at the landscape level that is associated with large-scale
oceanographic processes and their environmental consequences. We review the
relationships between variation in local species diversity and the
regional-scale phenomena of boundary constraints, gradients of productivity,
sediment heterogeneity, oxygen availability, hydrodynamic regimes, and
catastrophic physical disturbance. We present a conceptual model of how these
interdependent environmental factors shape regional-scale variation in local
diversity. Local communities in the deep sea may be composed of species that
exist as metapopulations whose regional distribution depends on a balance among
global-scale, landscape-scale, and small-scale dynamics. Environmental
gradients may form geographic patterns of diversity by influencing local
processes such as predation, resource partitioning, competitive exclusion, and
facilitation that determine species coexistence. The measurement of deep-sea
species diversity remains a vital issue in comparing geographic patterns and
evaluating their potential causes. Recent assessments of diversity using
species accumulation curves with randomly pooled samples confirm the
often-disputed claim that the deep sea supports higher diversity than the
continental shelf. However, more intensive quantitative sampling is required to
fully characterize the diversity of deep-sea sediments, the most extensive
habitat on Earth. Once considered to be constant, spatially uniform, and
isolated, deep-sea sediments are now recognized as a dynamic, richly textured
environment that is inextricably linked to the global biosphere. Regional
studies of the last two decades provide the empirical background necessary to
formulate and test specific hypotheses of causality by controlled sampling
designs and experimental approaches. |
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ISSN: | 0066-4162 2330-1902 |
DOI: | 10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.32.081501.114002 |