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The interspecific abundance–occupancy relationship in rocky intertidal communities
van Genne, B.; Scrosati, R.A. (2022). The interspecific abundance–occupancy relationship in rocky intertidal communities. Mar. Biol. Res. 18(1-2): 13-18. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17451000.2022.2105895
In: Marine Biology Research. Taylor & Francis: Oslo; Basingstoke. ISSN 1745-1000; e-ISSN 1745-1019, more
Peer reviewed article  

Keywords
    Seaweed
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Benthic, intertidal, invertebrate, seaweed, species composition, wave exposure

Authors  Top 
  • van Genne, B.
  • Scrosati, R.A.

Abstract
    A commonly assumed pattern in species assemblages is the abundance–occupancy relationship (AOR), which refers to a relationship between the mean local abundance of each species and the proportion of local sites that each species occupies. The AOR concept is relevant because it allows researchers to make inferences or predictions between species abundance and occupancy, which are key variables in ecology. Although the AOR is thought to be ubiquitous, it has not been found for every system where it has been tested. To date, the studies that have evaluated its generality were largely done in terrestrial systems. Therefore, there is a need to evaluate its occurrence in aquatic systems. This study tests whether the AOR occurs in rocky intertidal systems. Using data for algae and invertebrates from Atlantic Canada, we show that the negative binomial model properly describes the relationship between abundance and occupancy in rocky intertidal communities. Moreover, we found the AOR to hold for two hydrodynamically contrasting habitat types. Overall, these findings expand the applicability of the AOR to marine benthic systems. The raw data are included as part of this article and should be valuable for future syntheses on the AOR, as such studies will benefit from using datasets spanning terrestrial and aquatic systems. In this sense, our abundance data are particularly relevant because they describe density of organisms, which is a condition for AOR modelling that intertidal ecological studies typically do not follow entirely, as the abundance of sessile species is often measured as percent cover.

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