Large-scale spatio-temporal monitoring highlights hotspots of demersal fish diversity in the Mediterranean Sea
2015
Granger, Victoria | Fromentin, Jean-Marc | Bez, Nicolás | Relini, Giulio | Meynard, C.N. | Gaertner, Jean Claude | Maiorano, Porzia | García-Ruiz, Cristina | Follesa, Maria Cristina | Gristina, Michele | Peristeraki, Panagiota | Brind’Amour, Anik | Carbonara, Pierluigi | Charilaou, Charis | Esteban-Acón, Antonio | Jadaud, Angélique | Joksimovic, Aleksandar | Kallianiotis, Argyris | Kolitari, Jerina | Manfredi, Chiara | Massutí, Enric | Mifsud, Roberta | Quetglas, Antoni | Refes, Wahid | Sbrana, Mario | Vrgoc, Nedo | Spedicato, Maria Teresa | Mérigot, Bastien
Increasing human pressures and global environmental change may severely affect the diversity of species assemblages and associated ecosystem services. Despite the recent interest in phylogenetic and functional diversity, our knowledge on large spatio-temporal patterns of demersal fish diversity sampled by trawling remains still incomplete, notably in the Mediterranean Sea, one of the most threatened marine regions of the world. We investigated large spatio-temporal diversity patterns by analysing a dataset of 19,886 hauls from 10 to 800 m depth performed annually during the last two decades by standardised scientific bottom trawl field surveys across the Mediterranean Sea, within the MEDITS program. A multicomponent (eight diversity indices) and multi-scale (local assemblages, biogeographic regions to basins) approach indicates that only the two most traditional components (species richness and evenness) were sufficient to reflect patterns in taxonomic, phylogenetic or functional richness and divergence. We also put into question the use of widely computed indices that allow comparing directly taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional diversity within a unique mathematical framework. In addition, demersal fish assemblages sampled by trawl do not follow a continuous decreasing longitudinal/latitudinal diversity gradients (spatial effects explained up to 70.6% of deviance in regression tree and generalised linear models), for any of the indices and spatial scales analysed. Indeed, at both local and regional scales species richness was relatively high in the Iberian region, Malta, the Eastern Ionian and Aegean seas, meanwhile the Adriatic Sea and Cyprus showed a relatively low level. In contrast, evenness as well as taxonomic, phylogenetic and functional divergences did not show regional hotspots. All studied diversity components remained stable over the last two decades. Overall, our results highlight the need to use complementary diversity indices through different spatial scales when developing conservation strategies and defining delimitations for protected areas.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]We thank two anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments on the manuscript. V.G. is supported by a Presidency PhD Grant of University Montpellier 2. This study was carried out within the framework of the “Species assemblages and biodiversity” working group of the International MEDITS program. We thank colleagues who have participated to the MEDITS trawl surveys since 1994. The manuscript has been proof-read and corrected for the English by Michael Paul. This paper is Contribution No. 3408 of the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, College of William & Mary.
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