Title of article :
Ecotone or Ecocline: Ecological Boundaries in Estuaries
Author/Authors :
M. J. Attrill، نويسنده , , S. D. Rundle، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Abstract :
Two main ecological boundaries, ecotone and ecocline, have been defined in landscape ecology. At this scale, the estuary
represents a boundary between rivers and the sea, but there has been no attempt to fit empirical data for estuaries to these
boundary models. An extensive data set from the Thames estuary was analysed using multivariate techniques and
species-range analysis, in order to investigate whether the ecocline or the ecotone model was most relevant to this estuary.
Data for periods of high and low freshwater flow allowed the impact of large-scale fluctuations implicit in both models to
be determined.
A continuum of assemblages existed along the salinity gradient from freshwater river to the North Sea, with shifts in the
ranges of organisms apparent in response to changes in freshwater flow. This pattern closely fits an ecocline model.
However, the estuary differs from previously defined ecoclines in having two overlapping gradients in the major stressor:
from river to mid-estuary for freshwater species and from sea to mid-estuary for marine species. We propose, therefore, that
the estuary represents a two-ecocline model, with fauna inhabiting the mid-estuary being either freshwater or marine species
at the edge of their range, rather than ‘ true estuarine organisms ’. This allows a redefinition of the Remane diagram, with
estuarine species removed, and supports previous arguments that brackish-water species do not exist. Such two-ecocline
models may also exist in other marine systems, such as rocky shores.
Keywords :
macroinvertebrates , biogeography , freshwater flow , brackish-water fauna , Thames , Landscape ecology
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science