Document of bibliographic reference 367338

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Colonization in artificial seaweed substrates: two locations, one year
Abstract
Artificial substrates have been implemented to overcome the problems associated with quantitative sampling of marine epifaunal assemblages. These substrates provide artificial habitats that mimic natural habitat features, thereby standardizing the sampling effort and enabling direct comparisons among different sites and studies. This paper explores the potential of the “Artificial Seaweed Monitoring System” (ASMS) sampling methodology to evaluate the natural variability of assemblages along a coastline of more than 200 km, by describing the succession of the ASMS’ associated macrofauna at two Rías of the Galician Coast (NW Iberian Peninsula) after 3, 6, 9, and 12 months after deployment. The results show that macrofauna assemblages harbored by ASMS differ between locations for every type of data. The results also support the hypothesis that succession in benthic communities is not a linear process, but rather a mixture of different successional stages. The use of the ASMS is proved to be a successful standard monitoring methodology, as it is sensitive to scale-dependent patterns and captures the temporal variability of macrobenthic assemblages. Hence, the ASMS can serve as a replicable approach contributing to the “Good Environmental Status” assessment through non-destructive monitoring programs based on benthic marine macrofauna monitoring, capturing the variability in representative assemblages as long as sampling deployment periods are standard.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001017039300001
Bibliographic citation
Carreira-Flores, D.; Neto, R.; Ferreira, H.R.S.; Cabecinha, E.; Díaz-Agras, G.; Rubal, M.; Gomes, P.T. (2023). Colonization in artificial seaweed substrates: two locations, one year. Diversity 15(6): 733. https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d15060733
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Diego Carreira-Flores
author
Name
Regina Neto
author
Name
Hugo Ferreira
author
Name
Edna Cabecinha
author
Name
Guillermo Díaz-Agras
author
Name
Marcos Rubal
author
Name
Pedro Gomes

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d15060733

thesaurus terms

term
Seaweed (term code: 9676 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)

Document metadata

date created
2023-09-25
date modified
2023-09-25