Habitat structure shapes temperate reef assemblages across regional environmental gradients

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Standard Standard

Habitat structure shapes temperate reef assemblages across regional environmental gradients. / Jackson-Bue, Tim; Evans, Ally J; Lawrence, Peter et al.
In: Science of the Total Environment, 01.01.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Jackson-Bue, T, Evans, AJ, Lawrence, P, Brooks, P, Ward, S, Jenkins, S, Moore, PJ, Crowe, T, Neill, S & Davies, A 2024, 'Habitat structure shapes temperate reef assemblages across regional environmental gradients', Science of the Total Environment. <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969723061211>

APA

Jackson-Bue, T., Evans, A. J., Lawrence, P., Brooks, P., Ward, S., Jenkins, S., Moore, P. J., Crowe, T., Neill, S., & Davies, A. (2024). Habitat structure shapes temperate reef assemblages across regional environmental gradients. Science of the Total Environment, Article 167494. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969723061211

CBE

Jackson-Bue T, Evans AJ, Lawrence P, Brooks P, Ward S, Jenkins S, Moore PJ, Crowe T, Neill S, Davies A. 2024. Habitat structure shapes temperate reef assemblages across regional environmental gradients. Science of the Total Environment. Article 167494.

MLA

Jackson-Bue, Tim et al. "Habitat structure shapes temperate reef assemblages across regional environmental gradients". Science of the Total Environment. 2024.

VancouverVancouver

Jackson-Bue T, Evans AJ, Lawrence P, Brooks P, Ward S, Jenkins S et al. Habitat structure shapes temperate reef assemblages across regional environmental gradients. Science of the Total Environment. 2024 Jan 1;167494. Epub 2023 Oct 6.

Author

Jackson-Bue, Tim ; Evans, Ally J ; Lawrence, Peter et al. / Habitat structure shapes temperate reef assemblages across regional environmental gradients. In: Science of the Total Environment. 2024.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Habitat structure shapes temperate reef assemblages across regional environmental gradients

AU - Jackson-Bue, Tim

AU - Evans, Ally J

AU - Lawrence, Peter

AU - Brooks, Paul

AU - Ward, Sophie

AU - Jenkins, Stuart

AU - Moore, Pippa J.

AU - Crowe, Tasman

AU - Neill, Simon

AU - Davies, Andrew

PY - 2024/1/1

Y1 - 2024/1/1

N2 - Intertidal artificial habitats are proliferating, but are generally simpler in structure and host lower biodiversity than natural rocky reefs. Eco-engineering aims to enhance the biodiversity of coastal infrastructure, often through physical structural modifications that mimic topographic properties of natural shores. Relationships between biotic assemblages and structural properties of natural and artificial reefs have been extensively studied at sampling scales of up to 1 m2. But evidence that quantified local structural variation has an appreciable influence on biotic assemblages, at a shore-wide scale across regional environmental gradients, is lacking. Here we addressed this knowledge gap with an observational study at 32 natural and artificial intertidal reef sites in Wales, UK. We used multivariate community analysis and permutation tests to examine associations between local physical structure, regional environmental variables and sessile biotic assemblages. A potential influence of local habitat structure on assemblage composition was evident across regional-scale environmental gradients. Compared to natural sites, artificial reefs had lower taxonomic richness, distinct and more variable assemblage composition, and different physical structure. After removing the effect of habitat (natural or artificial), canonical correspondence analysis showed that environmental variables (wave exposure, sea surface temperature and salinity variation), along with two metrics of physical structure (standard deviation in log-transformed detrended roughness and skewness of surface verticality, both at 0.5 m scale), explained 40 % of the variation in assemblage composition among sites. The two structural metrics independently explained 14.5 % of the variation. Associations identified between individual taxa and environmental variables indicated that sites with a higher proportion of horizontal surfaces hosted more canopy macroalgae, which in turn support other algae and invertebrates. Our findings provide evidence to inform scaling-up of structural eco-engineering interventions from experimental contexts to enhance the biodiversity of coastal infrastructure across regional extents.

AB - Intertidal artificial habitats are proliferating, but are generally simpler in structure and host lower biodiversity than natural rocky reefs. Eco-engineering aims to enhance the biodiversity of coastal infrastructure, often through physical structural modifications that mimic topographic properties of natural shores. Relationships between biotic assemblages and structural properties of natural and artificial reefs have been extensively studied at sampling scales of up to 1 m2. But evidence that quantified local structural variation has an appreciable influence on biotic assemblages, at a shore-wide scale across regional environmental gradients, is lacking. Here we addressed this knowledge gap with an observational study at 32 natural and artificial intertidal reef sites in Wales, UK. We used multivariate community analysis and permutation tests to examine associations between local physical structure, regional environmental variables and sessile biotic assemblages. A potential influence of local habitat structure on assemblage composition was evident across regional-scale environmental gradients. Compared to natural sites, artificial reefs had lower taxonomic richness, distinct and more variable assemblage composition, and different physical structure. After removing the effect of habitat (natural or artificial), canonical correspondence analysis showed that environmental variables (wave exposure, sea surface temperature and salinity variation), along with two metrics of physical structure (standard deviation in log-transformed detrended roughness and skewness of surface verticality, both at 0.5 m scale), explained 40 % of the variation in assemblage composition among sites. The two structural metrics independently explained 14.5 % of the variation. Associations identified between individual taxa and environmental variables indicated that sites with a higher proportion of horizontal surfaces hosted more canopy macroalgae, which in turn support other algae and invertebrates. Our findings provide evidence to inform scaling-up of structural eco-engineering interventions from experimental contexts to enhance the biodiversity of coastal infrastructure across regional extents.

M3 - Article

JO - Science of the Total Environment

JF - Science of the Total Environment

SN - 0048-9697

M1 - 167494

ER -