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Dynamic relationships between body size,species richness,abundance, and energy use in a shallow marine epibenthic faunal community
Authors:Fabio A. Labra  Eduardo Hernández‐Miranda  Renato A. Quiñones
Affiliation:1. Centro de Investigación e Innovación para el Cambio Climático, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Santo Tomas, Código Postal, Santiago, Chile;2. Programa de Investigación Marina de Excelencia (PIMEX), Facultad de Ciencias Naturales & Oceanográficas, Universidad de Concepción, Concepción, Chile;3. Interdisciplinary Center for Aquaculture Research (INCAR), Casilla 160‐C, Universidad de Concepción, Concepción, Chile
Abstract:We study the temporal variation in the empirical relationships among body size (S), species richness (R), and abundance (A) in a shallow marine epibenthic faunal community in Coliumo Bay, Chile. We also extend previous analyses by calculating individual energy use (E) and test whether its bivariate and trivariate relationships with S and R are in agreement with expectations derived from the energetic equivalence rule. Carnivorous and scavenger species representing over 95% of sample abundance and biomass were studied. For each individual, body size (g) was measured and E was estimated following published allometric relationships. Data for each sample were tabulated into exponential body size bins, comparing species‐averaged values with individual‐based estimates which allow species to potentially occupy multiple size classes. For individual‐based data, both the number of individuals and species across body size classes are fit by a Weibull function rather than by a power law scaling. Species richness is also a power law of the number of individuals. Energy use shows a piecewise scaling relationship with body size, with energetic equivalence holding true only for size classes above the modal abundance class. Species‐based data showed either weak linear or no significant patterns, likely due to the decrease in the number of data points across body size classes. Hence, for individual‐based size spectra, the SRA relationship seems to be general despite seasonal forcing and strong disturbances in Coliumo Bay. The unimodal abundance distribution results in a piecewise energy scaling relationship, with small individuals showing a positive scaling and large individuals showing energetic equivalence. Hence, strict energetic equivalence should not be expected for unimodal abundance distributions. On the other hand, while species‐based data do not show unimodal SRA relationships, energy use across body size classes did not show significant trends, supporting energetic equivalence.
Keywords:Coliumo bay  energetic equivalence  humboldt current system  hypoxia  macroecological dynamics  south eastern pacific
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