Degradation of a photophilic algal community and its associated fauna from eastern Sicily (Mediterranean Sea)


Published: May 10, 2019
Keywords:
Marine vegetation IA Biocoenosis Cystoseira encrusting/mobile benthos Ionian Sea.
MARCELLO CATRA
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5267-1744
GIUSEPPINA ALONGI
RICCARDO LEONARDI
MAURO PIETRO NEGRI
ROSSANA SANFILIPPO
FRANCESCO SCIUTO
DONATELLA SERIO
ALFIO VIOLA
ANTONIETTA ROSSO
Abstract

The status of the “Biocoenosis of the Infralittoral Algae” of the upper infralittoral zone (at 5 m depth) from two selected stations along the eastern coast of Sicily (Ionian Sea, Mediterranean) was studied with a multiproxy approach involving the study of algae and associated protist and animal organisms, including foraminifers, serpulids, molluscs, bryozoans and ostracods. Scraped samples (40x40 cm) were collected at selected seasons during a 2-year period (2015-2016) in order to identify possible seasonal and spatial differences between the two stations, and to compare present data with historical ones. A community made up of the algae Halopteris scoparia, Padina pavonica, Dictyota dichotoma, Ellisolandia elongata and several other geniculate coralline algae was found in sites historically colonised by a Cystoseira brachycarpa community, which was not found during our study. These algae presently structure the community and provide substratum for several associated epibiotic species. Hierarchical cluster analysis and Non-Metric Multi-Dimensional Scaling Ordination significantly differentiate the communities between the two stations but show no clear seasonal trend. Differences largely relate to changes in the algal vegetation and the impact produced by the regression of structuring species on epibiots (especially serpulids and bryozoans). Comparison with historical algal data from the area indicates the disappearance of Cystoseira brachycarpa, which was present at least until the last ’1990s, and a community degradation with a considerable loss in species richness. This parallels observations in other Mediterranean areas, and could be related to the increase in echinoid population density and their heavy grazing activity.

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