Title of article
The relationship of environmental factors to the structure and distribution of subtidal seaweed vegetation of the western Basque coast (N Spain)
Author/Authors
I. Diez de Ulzurrun، نويسنده , , A. Santolaria، نويسنده , , J. M. Gorostiaga، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
14
From page
1041
To page
1054
Abstract
Subtidal vegetation distribution patterns in relation to environmental conditions (pollution, wave exposure, sedimentation,
substratum slope and depth) were studied along the western Basque coast, northern Spain, by applying canonical correspondence
analysis and log–linear regressions. A total of 90 species of macrophytes were recorded by systematic sampling along 21 transects.
Mesophyllum lichenoides and Cystoseira baccata were the most abundant (accounting for 47% of the overall algal cover). Gelidium
sesquipedale, Pterosiphonia complanata, Zanardinia prototypus, Codium decorticatum and Asparagopsis armata (Falkenbergia phase)
were other macrophytes with significant cover. Ordination analysis indicates that the five environmental variables explored account
between them for 52% of the species data variance. Pollution, sedimentation and wave exposure were the principal factors
explaining differences in flora composition and abundance (24, 14 and 12% of the explained variance, respectively). Log–linear
regressions and canonical correspondence analyses reveal that C. baccata and G. sesquipedale exhibit a negative relationship with
pollution, while sediment loading negatively affects G. sesquipedale, and C. baccata cannot stand high wave exposure levels. In
contrast, P. complanata and C. decorticatum show a positive relationship with pollution and can bear high levels of sedimentation
and wave exposure. M. lichenoides and Z. prototypus present a wide tolerance range for all these factors. Macroalgal cover, species
richness and diversity remain practically constant from unpolluted to slightly polluted sites, but they decrease sharply under
moderately polluted conditions. In the same way, algal cover decreases as sediment loading increases, but diversity and species
richness show the highest values at intermediate levels of sedimentation. In relation to wave exposure, maximum algal cover was
achieved at very exposed habitats whereas diversity and species richness were higher under semi-exposed conditions.
Keywords
sublittoral macrophytes , Pollution , Diversity , Wave action , sedimentation , phytobenthos
Journal title
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Record number
954174
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