Document of bibliographic reference 392857

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Non-indigenous species and their realized niche in tidepools along the south-east Pacific coast
Abstract
Non-indigenous species (NIS) have the potential to colonize and become established in a wide range of coastal habitats. Species with broad environmental tolerances can quickly adapt to local conditions and expand their niches along environmental gradients, and even colonize habitats with extreme abiotic conditions. Here we report and document the distribution of eight marine NIS (four seaweed and four invertebrate species) found in tidepools along a 3000 km latitudinal gradient along the Pacific coast of Chile (18.4°S to 41.9°S). The seaweed NIS Codium fragile, Capreolia implexa, Schottera nicaeensis and Mastocarpus latissimus were mostly distributed towards high latitudes (i.e., more southerly locations), where temperatures in tidepools were low. The invertebrate NIS Anemonia alicemartinae, Ciona robusta, Bugula neritina and Bugulina flabellata were more common towards low latitudes, where high temperatures were registered in the tidepools. Across the intertidal gradient, seaweed NIS were mostly found in pools in the mid and low intertidal zone, while invertebrate NIS occurred mostly in pools from the mid and upper intertidal zones. The realized niche spaces of NIS (based on the Outlying Mean Index, OMI) in the study area were mainly influenced by environmental conditions of temperature and salinity (along the latitudinal and intertidal gradients), while other tidepool characteristics (depth, surface area, exposition, and complexity) only had minor effects. Five of the eight NIS exhibited a realized niche space coinciding with the average tidepool environmental conditions, while marginal niches were occupied by species with affinities for specific temperatures and salinities along the latitudinal and intertidal gradients. Our results indicate that physiological tolerances to environmental factors play a fundamental role in the distribution of seaweed and invertebrate NIS in tidepools along the Chilean coast. This study confirms that tidepools offer suitable conditions for some seaweed and invertebrate NIS, potentially facilitating their invasion into new natural habitats. 
Bibliographic citation
Jofré Madariaga, D.; Aguilera Moya, M.A.; Alves-de-Souza, C.; Arias, R.M.; Gutow, L.; Jeldres Polanco, R.C.; Macaya, E.C.; Kappes, M.M.; Ortiz Arancibia, L.N.; Pino, O.; Rech, S.; Rothäusler, E.; Harrod, C.; Thiel, M. (2024). Non-indigenous species and their realized niche in tidepools along the south-east Pacific coast. Mar. Environ. Res. 199: 106541. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106541
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
David Jofré Madariaga
author
Name
Moisés Aguilera Moya
author
Name
Catharina Alves-de-Souza
author
Name
Rene Matias Arias
author
Name
Lars Gutow
author
Name
Ricardo Antonio Jeldres Polanco
author
Name
Erasmo Macaya
author
Name
Martín Munizaga Kappes
author
Name
Leslie Nicole Ortiz Arancibia
author
Name
Oscar Pino
author
Name
Sabine Rech
author
Name
Eva Rothäusler
author
Name
Chris Harrod
author
Name
Martin Thiel

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106541

thesaurus terms

term
Ecological niches (term code: 2616 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Rock pools (term code: 9620 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)

taxonomic terms

taxonomic terms associated with this publication
Anemonia alicemartinae
Bugula neritina
Bugulina flabellata
Capreolia implexa
Ciona robusta
Codium fragile
Mastocarpus latissimus
Schottera nicaeensis

Document metadata

date created
2024-06-24
date modified
2024-06-24