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  4. Spatial Patterns Of Continental Shelf Faunal Community Structure Along The Western Antarctic Peninsula
 
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Spatial Patterns Of Continental Shelf Faunal Community Structure Along The Western Antarctic Peninsula

Journal
PLOS ONE
Date Issued
2020-10-01
Author(s)
Alan M. Friedlander
Whitney Goodell
Pelayo Salinas-de-León
Enric Ballesteros
Eric Berkenpas
Andrea P. Capurro
César A. Cárdenas
Mathias Hüne
Cristian Lagger
Landaeta, Mauricio  
Facultad de Ciencias  
Alex Muñoz
Mercedes Santos
Alan Turchik
Rodolfo Werner
Enric Sala
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0239895
WoS ID
WOS:000590270000069
Abstract
Knowledge of continental shelf faunal biodiversity of Antarctica is patchy and as such, the ecology of this unique ecosystem is not fully understood. To this end, we deployed baited cameras at 20 locations along ~ 500 km of the Western Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) at depths from 90 to 797 m. We identified 111 unique taxa, with mud bottom accounting for 90% of the dominant (≥ 50% cover) habitat sampled. Amphipoda comprised 41% of the total maximum number of individuals per camera deployment (MaxN) and occurred on 75% of deployments. Excluding this taxon, the highest MaxN occurred around King George/25 de Mayo Island and was driven primarily by the abundance of krill (Euphausiidae), which accounted for 36% of total average MaxN among deployments around this island. In comparison, krill comprised 22% of total average MaxN at Deception Island and only 10% along the peninsula. Taxa richness, diversity, and evenness all increased with depth and depth explained 18.2% of the variation in community structure among locations, which may be explained by decreasing ice scour with depth. We identified a number of Vulnerable Marine Ecosystem taxa, including habitat-forming species of cold-water corals and sponge fields. Channichthyidae was the most common fish family, occurring on 80% of all deployments. The Antarctic jonasfish (Notolepis coatsorum) was the most frequently encountered fish taxa, occurring on 70% of all deployments and comprising 25% of total MaxN among all deployments. Nototheniidae was the most numerically abundant fish family, accounting for 36% of total MaxN and was present on 70% of the deployments. The WAP is among the fastest warming regions on Earth and mitigating the impacts of warming, along with more direct impacts such as those from fishing, is critical in providing opportunities for species to adapt to environmental change and to preserve this unique ecosystem.
Subjects

Agricultural And Biol...

Biochemistry, Genetic...

Multidisciplinary Sci...

Medicine

OCDE Subjects

Medical And Health Sc...

Quartile (Date Issued)
Q2
License
acceso abierto
Product(s)
Metadata for deep-sea camera deployments.  
Community metrics from deep-sea camera deployments.  
Relationships between community metrics and deployment depth using least-squares linear regression analyses.  
Comparison of community composition based on MaxN among locations using a Permutation-Based Multivariate Analysis of Variance (PERMANOVA).  
Top 15 taxa overall among all 20 deployment locations.  
Similarity of Percentages (SIMPER) for taxa most responsible for the percent dissimilarities between locations using Bray-Curtis similarity analysis of hierarchical agglomerative group average clustering.  

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