Ecology Department, Biology Faculty, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
PLoS One. 2013;8(1):e53742. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0053742. Epub 2013 Jan 10.
Extreme events are rare, stochastic perturbations that can cause abrupt and dramatic ecological change within a short period of time relative to the lifespan of organisms. Studies over time provide exceptional opportunities to detect the effects of extreme climatic events and to measure their impacts by quantifying rates of change at population and community levels. In this study, we show how an extreme storm event affected the dynamics of benthic coralligenous outcrops in the NW Mediterranean Sea using data acquired before (2006-2008) and after the impact (2009-2010) at four different sites. Storms of comparable severity have been documented to occur occasionally within periods of 50 years in the Mediterranean Sea. We assessed the effects derived from the storm comparing changes in benthic community composition at sites exposed to and sheltered from this extreme event. The sites analyzed showed different damage from severe to negligible. The most exposed and impacted site experienced a major shift immediately after the storm, represented by changes in the species richness and beta diversity of benthic species. This site also showed higher compositional variability immediately after the storm and over the following year. The loss of cover of benthic species resulted between 22% and 58%. The damage across these species (e.g. calcareous algae, sponges, anthozoans, bryozoans, tunicates) was uneven, and those with fragile forms were the most impacted, showing cover losses up to 50 to 100%. Interestingly, small patches survived after the storm and began to grow slightly during the following year. In contrast, sheltered sites showed no significant changes in all the studied parameters, indicating no variations due to the storm. This study provides new insights into the responses to large and rare extreme events of Mediterranean communities with low dynamics and long-lived species, which are among the most threatened by the effects of global change.
极端事件是罕见的、随机的扰动量,它们能够在相对生物寿命较短的时间内引起急剧而显著的生态变化。随着时间的推移进行研究,为检测极端气候事件的影响并通过量化种群和群落水平的变化率来衡量其影响提供了极好的机会。在本研究中,我们展示了一场极端风暴事件如何影响西北地中海的底栖珊瑚礁生境斑块的动态,使用了在冲击前后(2009-2010 年)在四个不同地点获取的数据。在地中海,类似严重程度的风暴偶尔会在 50 年的时间内发生。我们通过比较暴露于和免受该极端事件影响的地点的底栖群落组成的变化来评估风暴带来的影响。分析的地点显示出从严重到可忽略的不同程度的破坏。最暴露和受影响的地点在风暴后立即经历了一次重大转变,表现为底栖物种的物种丰富度和β多样性的变化。该地点在风暴后和接下来的一年中也表现出更高的组成变异性。底栖物种的覆盖损失在 22%至 58%之间。这些物种(如钙质藻类、海绵、珊瑚虫、苔藓虫、被囊动物)的破坏程度不均匀,形态脆弱的物种受到的影响最大,覆盖损失高达 50%至 100%。有趣的是,风暴后小斑块存活下来,并在接下来的一年中开始略有生长。相比之下,庇护地点在所有研究参数中均未显示出显著变化,表明由于风暴没有变化。本研究为低动态和长寿命物种的地中海群落对大型和罕见极端事件的响应提供了新的见解,这些物种是受全球变化影响最严重的物种之一。