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Salinity stratified benthic macrofaunal communities and long-term monitoring along the west coast of Sweden
Authors:Rutger Rosenberg  Peter Möller
Institution:Swedish Water and Air Pollution Research Laboratory, Gothenburg, Sweden
Abstract:Benthic macrofauna was quantitatively sampled in 12 coastal areas along the west coast of Sweden in 1971–1976. The Baltic Current creates a halocline at ≈15m depth which acts as a barrier between two differently structured benthic communities, one of which has a wide extension along the coast below the halocline and the other above the halocline. Physical and chemical factors, e.g., variations in salinity and temperature, have a great influence on the faunal structure above the halocline, whereas biological processes are the main determinating factors of the faunal composition in the comparatively more stable environment below the halocline. The sub-halocline community contains significantly more species (60%), a significantly higher mean abundance (4200 compared with 2000 ind. m?2) and a significantly greater mean biomass (146 compared with 71 g m?2 wet wt) than that above the halocline. Diversity measured by the Shannon-Wiener formula and its evenness had approximately the same means in both these habitats, 3.3–3.7 and 0.62, respectively.Four of the areas investigated in 1976 were also studied in the 1920's by approximately the same methods. The number of species, abundance, and biomass were significantly greater in the recent samples than in those taken half a century ago. and the community structures differed between the two periods. These differences are attributed to seasonal and natural long-term changes and different methods in processing the samples obtained. It is concluded that the halocline is a habitat divider and creates a vertical discontinuity for benthic communities on the west coast of Sweden.
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