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The invasibility of marine algal assemblages: role of functional diversity and identity
Arenas, F.; Sánchez, I.; Hawkins, S.; Jenkins, S.R. (2006). The invasibility of marine algal assemblages: role of functional diversity and identity. Ecology 87(11): 2851-2861
In: Ecology. Ecological Society of America: Brooklyn, NY. ISSN 0012-9658; e-ISSN 1939-9170
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Algae
    Biodiversity
    Environments > Aquatic environment > Marine environment > Intertidal environment
    Fucus serratus Linnaeus, 1753 [WoRMS]
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Arenas, F., more
  • Sánchez, I.
  • Hawkins, S., more
  • Jenkins, S.R., more

Abstract
    The emergence of the biodiversity–ecosystem functioning debate in the last decade has renewed interest in understanding why some communities are more easily invaded than others and how the impact of invasion on recipient communities and ecosystems varies. To date most of the research on invasibility has focused on taxonomic diversity, i.e., species richness. However, functional diversity of the communities should be more relevant for the resistance of the community to invasions, as the extent of functional differences among the species in an assemblage is a major determinant of ecosystem processes.Although coastal marine habitats are among the most heavily invaded ecosystems, studies on community invasibility and vulnerability in these habitats are scarce. We carried out a manipulative field experiment in tide pools of the rocky intertidal to test the hypothesis that increasing functional richness reduces the susceptibility of macroalgal communities to invasion. We selected a priori four functional groups on the basis of previous knowledge of local species characteristics: encrusting, turf, subcanopy, and canopy species. Synthetic assemblages containing one, two, three, or four different functional groups of seaweeds were created, and invasion by native species was monitored over an eight-month period. Cover and resource availability in the assemblages with only one functional group showed different patterns in the use of space and light, confirming true functional differences among our groups. Experimental results showed that the identity of functional groups was more important than functional richness in determining the ability of macroalgal communities to resist invasion and that resistance to invasion was resource-mediated.

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