Richness of experimental marine invertebrate communities across latitude (Competition and Predation across Latitude)

<p>Richness of sessile marine invertebrate communities from coastal sites across a latitudinal gradient spanning the subarctic to the tropics. Communities developed for three or 12 months under nine different treatments that tested the effect of predation and competition. Caging was used to re...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Amy L. Freestone, Gregory E. Ruiz, Mark E. Torchin, Laura J. Jurgens, Carmen Schlöder, Mariana Bonfim, Diana P. López, Michele F. Repetto
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO) 2021
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Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:df46adc0e8e49ba18f13cf5aa72c1be41ee09e85073e36cb45eb9e70370b9dc4
Description
Summary:<p>Richness of sessile marine invertebrate communities from coastal sites across a latitudinal gradient spanning the subarctic to the tropics. Communities developed for three or 12 months under nine different treatments that tested the effect of predation and competition. Caging was used to reduce predation pressure and biomass removals opened up space, a limiting resource in sessile communities.</p>