Diversity patterns along and across the Chilean margin: A continental slope encompassing oxygen gradients and methane seep benthic habitats

14 páginas, 4 tablas,5 figuras. In the present study we review datasets available for the Chilean margin to assess the relationship between environmental (or habitat) heterogeneity and benthic diversity. Several factors, such as the presence of different water masses, including the oxygen-deficient E...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Ecology
Main Authors: Sellanes, Javier, Neira, C., Quiroga, E., Teixidó, Nuria
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Publishing 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/56612
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0485.2009.00332.x
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Summary:14 páginas, 4 tablas,5 figuras. In the present study we review datasets available for the Chilean margin to assess the relationship between environmental (or habitat) heterogeneity and benthic diversity. Several factors, such as the presence of different water masses, including the oxygen-deficient Equatorial Sub-surface Waters (ESSW) at the continental shelf and upper slope, and the Antarctic Intermediate Waters (AIW) at mid slope depths appear to control the bathymetric distribution of benthic communities. The presence of methane seeps and an extended oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) add complexity to the benthic distribution patterns observed. All these factors generate environmental heterogeneity, which is predicted to affect the diversity patterns both along and across the Chilean continental margin. The response to these factors differs among different faunal size groups: meio-, macro-, and megafauna. Physiological adaptations to oxygen deficiency and constraints related to body size of each group seem to explain the larger-scale patterns observed, while sediment⁄ habitat heterogeneity (e.g. at water mass boundaries, hardgrounds, biogeochemical patchiness, sediment organic content, grain size) may influence the local fauna diversity patterns. The expedition was funded by the German BMBF (grant No. 03G0156A). We also thank the captain and crew of the Chilean Navy’s R⁄V Vidal Gorma´z for support at sea during the SeepOx cruise, funded by FONDECYT project #1061217 to J.S. Peer reviewed