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The influence of geological, geochemical, and biogenic habitat heterogeneity on seep biodiversity
Authors:Erik E Cordes  Marina R Cunha  Joëlle Galéron  Camilo Mora  Karine Olu-Le Roy  Myriam Sibuet  Saskia Van Gaever  Ann Vanreusel  & Lisa A Levin
Institution: Biology Department, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA;
 Departamento de Biologia &CESAM, Universidade de Aveiro, Campus de Santiago, Aveiro, Portugal;
 Département Etude des Ecosystemes Profonds, IFREMER, Centre de Brest, Plouzané, France;
 Scripps Institute of Oceanography, Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA, USA;
 Institut Océanographique, Paris, France and formerly IFREMER, Centre de Brest, Plouzane, France;
 Marine Biology Research group, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
Abstract:Cold seeps are among the most heterogeneous of all continental margin habitats. Abiotic sources of heterogeneity in these systems include local variability in fluid flow, geochemistry, and substrate type, which give rise to different sets of microbial communities, microbial symbiont-bearing foundation species, and associated heterotrophic species. Biogenic habitats created by microbial mats and the symbiotic species including vesicomyid clams, bathymodiolin mussels, and siboglinid tubeworms add an additional layer of complexity to seep habitats. These forms of habitat heterogeneity result in a variety of macrofaunal and meiofaunal communities that respond to changes in structural complexity, habitat geochemistry, nutrient sources, and interspecific interactions in different ways and at different scales. These responses are predicted by a set of theoretical metacommunity models, the most appropriate of which for seep systems appears to be the 'species sorting' concept, an extension of niche theory. This concept is demonstrated through predictable patterns of community assembly, succession, and beta-level diversity. These processes are described using a newly developed analytical technique examining the change in the slope of the species accumulation curve with the number of habitats examined. The diversity response to heterogeneity has a consistent form, but quantitatively changes at different seep sites around the world as the types of habitats present and the size-classes of fauna analyzed change. The increase in beta diversity across seep habitat types demonstrates that cold seeps and associated biogenic habitats are significant sources of heterogeneity on continental margins globally.
Keywords:Beta diversity  chemosynthetic communities  cold seep  continental margin  macrofauna  meiofauna  metacommunity  species accumulation
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