KAUST Logo White
  • ABOUT
  • TEAM
  • RESEARCH
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • PROJECTS
  • CONTACT
  • NEWS
logo white_400px
NavBar
BEM_Background Grid - Test_v2
/PUBLICATIONS

Scientific Insights

Explore our latest research and findings that drive marine conservation and innovation. From groundbreaking studies to insightful reviews, our publications reflect our commitment to advancing marine science and policy.

  • Clear filters

Broad-scale spatial distribution patterns of soft-sediment macrobenthic communities in the Red Sea

by Susana Carvalho, Zahra Alsafar, Joanne I. Ellis, Hamed Alghamdi, Joao Curdia
Research article Year: 2023 DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2023.1072342

Abstract

In sub-tropical and tropical regions, the diversity patterns of soft-sediment macrobenthic communities are still poorly understood, particularly when compared to temperate shelf environments. The present study investigates spatial patterns of variability in macrobenthic distribution along the eastern Red Sea margin, and the role of sediment composition and other explanatory variables in determining such patterns. This study has two main objectives: (i) to produce a baseline characterization of the Saudi Arabian Red Sea macrobenthic infauna, particularly along the central and southern regions, (ii) to assess the relative contribution of two major processes driving macrobenthic communities (i.e., dispersal-based and environmental filtering), based on changes on beta-diversity components (turnover and nestedness) across multiple scales (up to ~600km), using relevant modeling methodologies. Shallow soft-sediment macrobenthic communities in the Red Sea showed extremely high small-scale variability, highlighted by the percentage of rare species (44% of species present at a single sample) and the dominance of turnover (species replacement) over nestedness. Our results also suggest a strong influence of broad- over fine-scale variation in the species composition. However, sedimentary characteristics, particularly grain-size, played a critical role governing the distribution patterns of soft-sediment macrobenthic communities in the Red Sea. Our findings highlight the importance of regional factors in shaping the macrofaunal community composition whilst also highlighting the role of high species diversity at local scales. The current results suggest the need for conservation measures from regional levels (to maintain genetic diversity) to local levels (to preserve the high occurrence of rare species). To our knowledge, no other study investigated the distribution of Red Sea marine species over large spatial scales combining modeling methods and the partitioning of beta-diversity. The current approach applied to soft-sediment macroinvertebrates can be extended to other marine communities since conservation strategies can be more effective when mechanisms governing species distribution are considered.

Keywords

Habitat heterogeneity Geographical distance Environmental distance Subtropics Macrofauna assemblages Beta-diveristy Distribution patterns
logo-white

"KAUST shall be a beacon for peace, hope and reconciliation, and shall serve the people of the Kingdom and the world."

King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, 1924 – 2015

KAUST Information

  • +966 (12) 808-3463
  • media@kaust.edu.sa
  • 4700 King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

    Thuwal 23955-6900

    Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

About BEM Lab

  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
BEM_png_2000x2000
© 2019 King Abdullah University of Science and Technology. All rights reserved
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Loading...