Upwelling phenomena: the main driver of the latitudinal diversity pattern in Northwest Africa?

Although some depth-related patterns of the continental margin biodiversity are currently understood, the hypothesis that support the latitudinal gradient of species richness increasing from poles to tropics, has only been tested for particular North Atlantic taxa. To date, no systematic and compara...

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Main Authors: Ramos, A. (Ana), Ramil, F. (Francisco), García-Isarch, E. (Eva), Matos-Pita, S.S. (Susana Soto) de, Castillo, S. (Sara), Gil, M. (Marta), Calero, B. (Belén), Muñoz, I. (Isabel), Rocha, F. (Francisco), Fernández-Gago, R.
Other Authors: Mohamed Moctar, S.M., Barry, A.O. (Amadou)
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Centro Oceanográfico de Vigo
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10508/9822
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spelling ftieo:oai:repositorio.ieo.es:10508/9822 2023-05-15T16:18:27+02:00 Upwelling phenomena: the main driver of the latitudinal diversity pattern in Northwest Africa? Ramos, A. (Ana) Ramil, F. (Francisco) García-Isarch, E. (Eva) Matos-Pita, S.S. (Susana Soto) de Castillo, S. (Sara) Gil, M. (Marta) Calero, B. (Belén) Muñoz, I. (Isabel) Rocha, F. (Francisco) Fernández-Gago, R. Mohamed Moctar, S.M. Barry, A.O. (Amadou) 2004-2012 Atlantic Ocean Central Atlantic Eastern Central Atlantic Sahara waters http://hdl.handle.net/10508/9822 eng eng Centro Oceanográfico de Vigo EcoAfrik http://hdl.handle.net/10508/9822 14th Deep-Sea Biology Symposium. (31/08/2015 - 04/09/2015. Aveiro (Portugal)). today. conferenceObject. En: , . Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Spain http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/ openAccess CC-BY-NC-ND Biodiversity Patterns Benthos Suspension-feeders Upwelling Northwest Africa conferenceObject ftieo 2022-07-26T23:48:49Z Although some depth-related patterns of the continental margin biodiversity are currently understood, the hypothesis that support the latitudinal gradient of species richness increasing from poles to tropics, has only been tested for particular North Atlantic taxa. To date, no systematic and comparative research considering the global zoobenthos at a large regional scale has been undertaken and therefore, the existence of a latitudinal large scale pattern remains uncertain worldwide. Despite the knowledge on benthic biodiversity of Northwest African slope is currently very scarce, some authors pointed out that faunal richness is higher in the upwelling areas than in the tropical regions, being probably less influenced by latitude than by upwelling phenomena and seasonal displacements of thermal fronts occurring in the so-called ‘alternance’ regions. The intensive sampling program following identical methodology in the Canary Current Large Marine Ecosystem region between 2002 and 2012 within the framework of the EcoAfrik and FAO EAF-Nansen projects, offered a unique overview of the biodiversity patterns along the Northwestern African deep-shelf and slope. This approach is based on the taxonomic identification of large collections and the analysis of quantitative data from the benthic invertebrates taken in 1350 trawl stations carried out throughout the 11 research surveys onboard R/V Dr. Fridtjof Nansen and R/V Vizconde de Eza. Preliminary results of these surveys did not show a diversity pattern directly related to latitude along the Northwestern African slope. Specific richness increases significantly along the Moroccan and Saharan coasts, from Cape Spartel (Gibraltar Strait) to Cape Blanc, but decreasing southwards along the Mauritanian continental margin. The highest specific richness values are recorded along the Saharan slope (mean = 36 species by station versus mean = 22–23 species per station in the southern region). The global megabenthic richness and the proportion of suspension-feeders are both higher ... Conference Object Fridtjof Nansen North Atlantic Instituto Español de Oceanografía: e-IEO Fridtjof ENVELOPE(-56.717,-56.717,-63.567,-63.567)
institution Open Polar
collection Instituto Español de Oceanografía: e-IEO
op_collection_id ftieo
language English
topic Biodiversity
Patterns
Benthos
Suspension-feeders
Upwelling
Northwest Africa
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Patterns
Benthos
Suspension-feeders
Upwelling
Northwest Africa
Ramos, A. (Ana)
Ramil, F. (Francisco)
García-Isarch, E. (Eva)
Matos-Pita, S.S. (Susana Soto) de
Castillo, S. (Sara)
Gil, M. (Marta)
Calero, B. (Belén)
Muñoz, I. (Isabel)
Rocha, F. (Francisco)
Fernández-Gago, R.
Upwelling phenomena: the main driver of the latitudinal diversity pattern in Northwest Africa?
topic_facet Biodiversity
Patterns
Benthos
Suspension-feeders
Upwelling
Northwest Africa
description Although some depth-related patterns of the continental margin biodiversity are currently understood, the hypothesis that support the latitudinal gradient of species richness increasing from poles to tropics, has only been tested for particular North Atlantic taxa. To date, no systematic and comparative research considering the global zoobenthos at a large regional scale has been undertaken and therefore, the existence of a latitudinal large scale pattern remains uncertain worldwide. Despite the knowledge on benthic biodiversity of Northwest African slope is currently very scarce, some authors pointed out that faunal richness is higher in the upwelling areas than in the tropical regions, being probably less influenced by latitude than by upwelling phenomena and seasonal displacements of thermal fronts occurring in the so-called ‘alternance’ regions. The intensive sampling program following identical methodology in the Canary Current Large Marine Ecosystem region between 2002 and 2012 within the framework of the EcoAfrik and FAO EAF-Nansen projects, offered a unique overview of the biodiversity patterns along the Northwestern African deep-shelf and slope. This approach is based on the taxonomic identification of large collections and the analysis of quantitative data from the benthic invertebrates taken in 1350 trawl stations carried out throughout the 11 research surveys onboard R/V Dr. Fridtjof Nansen and R/V Vizconde de Eza. Preliminary results of these surveys did not show a diversity pattern directly related to latitude along the Northwestern African slope. Specific richness increases significantly along the Moroccan and Saharan coasts, from Cape Spartel (Gibraltar Strait) to Cape Blanc, but decreasing southwards along the Mauritanian continental margin. The highest specific richness values are recorded along the Saharan slope (mean = 36 species by station versus mean = 22–23 species per station in the southern region). The global megabenthic richness and the proportion of suspension-feeders are both higher ...
author2 Mohamed Moctar, S.M.
Barry, A.O. (Amadou)
format Conference Object
author Ramos, A. (Ana)
Ramil, F. (Francisco)
García-Isarch, E. (Eva)
Matos-Pita, S.S. (Susana Soto) de
Castillo, S. (Sara)
Gil, M. (Marta)
Calero, B. (Belén)
Muñoz, I. (Isabel)
Rocha, F. (Francisco)
Fernández-Gago, R.
author_facet Ramos, A. (Ana)
Ramil, F. (Francisco)
García-Isarch, E. (Eva)
Matos-Pita, S.S. (Susana Soto) de
Castillo, S. (Sara)
Gil, M. (Marta)
Calero, B. (Belén)
Muñoz, I. (Isabel)
Rocha, F. (Francisco)
Fernández-Gago, R.
author_sort Ramos, A. (Ana)
title Upwelling phenomena: the main driver of the latitudinal diversity pattern in Northwest Africa?
title_short Upwelling phenomena: the main driver of the latitudinal diversity pattern in Northwest Africa?
title_full Upwelling phenomena: the main driver of the latitudinal diversity pattern in Northwest Africa?
title_fullStr Upwelling phenomena: the main driver of the latitudinal diversity pattern in Northwest Africa?
title_full_unstemmed Upwelling phenomena: the main driver of the latitudinal diversity pattern in Northwest Africa?
title_sort upwelling phenomena: the main driver of the latitudinal diversity pattern in northwest africa?
publisher Centro Oceanográfico de Vigo
url http://hdl.handle.net/10508/9822
op_coverage 2004-2012
Atlantic Ocean
Central Atlantic
Eastern Central Atlantic
Sahara waters
long_lat ENVELOPE(-56.717,-56.717,-63.567,-63.567)
geographic Fridtjof
geographic_facet Fridtjof
genre Fridtjof Nansen
North Atlantic
genre_facet Fridtjof Nansen
North Atlantic
op_relation EcoAfrik
http://hdl.handle.net/10508/9822
14th Deep-Sea Biology Symposium. (31/08/2015 - 04/09/2015. Aveiro (Portugal)). today. conferenceObject. En: , .
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Spain
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/
openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
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