Diversity (Sep 2021)
Polychaete (Annelida) Diversity Patterns in Southern Gulf of Mexico: The Influence of Spatial Structure and Environmental Variables
Abstract
A comprehensive database was built to examine the spatial diversity patterns of polychaete species from the continental shelf in Southern Gulf of Mexico. Using Cluster and nMDS analysis we found the composition of polychaete species to be different between the terrigenous and carbonate regions of the Gulf. To test the relative importance of spatial and environmental components in the polychaetae community structure in the Southern Gulf of Mexico, we examined the spatial relationships between polychaetae assemblages and environmental variables over broad geographical scales. A distance-based redundancy analysis (dbRDA) and variation partitioning was used to quantify the relative importance of these explanatory variables on the spatial variations of species richness and composition. Variation partitioning is an important tool to investigate the importance of spatial structure to species distribution in communities, but it has not yet been used in marine ecosystems. The significance level of spatial and environmental components to the distribution of polychaete species showed that the combined effect of spatial processes and sediment characteristics explained a higher percentage of variance than those parameters could alone.
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