Latin American Journal of Aquatic Research (Oct 2014)

Functional community structure of shallow hard bottom communities at Easter Island (Rapa Nui): Estructura funcional de comunidades que habitan sobre los fondos duros de Isla de Pascua (Rapa Nui)

  • Evie A Wieters,
  • Alba Medrano,
  • Alejandro Pérez-Matus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3856/vol42-issue4-fulltext-10
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 4
pp. 827 – 844

Abstract

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Important, often abrupt, and irreversible shifts associated with the degradation of ecosystem functioning and services are increasingly commonplace. Thus, a trait-based view of communities may be more insightful than that based solely on species composition, especially when inferring ecological responses to environmental change. This underscores the importance and urgency of establishing benchmarks against which future community changes and functional structure can be evaluated. As a first step toward setting these baselines and their current spatial variability, we here describe geographic and among-habitat patterns in the functional structure of shallow hard bottom communities, including fish assemblages, across the northeast and west coasts of Rapa Nui. We also document temporal patterns of change in dominant benthic functional groups that have taken place over the past 15 years at selected sites on this isolated Pacific island. Generally weak vertical zonation patterns were observed, with most striking differences due to the paucity of branching pocilloporid corals in shallow waters(15 m) habitats, with contrasting recovery. These results suggest depth-dependent disturbance regimes that differ in types and frequency of events, as well as capacity to recover. Overall, our results highlight the apparent resilience of the current system and provide a first-cut benchmark as to where management subsystems might be prescribed so as to spatially match ecosystem characteristics.

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