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Diversity of calanoid copepods in the North Atlantic and adjacent seas: species associations and biogeography

Present-day patterns in pelagic biodiversity are the result of the interaction of many factors acting at different scales. Developing an understanding of the processes that regulate the diversity of oceanic ecosystems is thus challenging. In this study, diversity of calanoid copepods was decomposed...

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Published in:Marine ecology. Progress series (Halstenbek) 2002-01, Vol.232, p.179-195
Main Authors: Beaugrand, Grégory, Ibañez, Frédéric, Lindley, J. Alistair, Reid, Philip C.
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Language:English
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container_title Marine ecology. Progress series (Halstenbek)
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creator Beaugrand, Grégory
Ibañez, Frédéric
Lindley, J. Alistair
Reid, Philip C.
description Present-day patterns in pelagic biodiversity are the result of the interaction of many factors acting at different scales. Developing an understanding of the processes that regulate the diversity of oceanic ecosystems is thus challenging. In this study, diversity of calanoid copepods was decomposed into species associations by means of the recent ‘indicator value method’ and multivariate analyses. For the first time, at an oceanic basin scale and with a spatial resolution approaching the mesoscale, species associations of calanoid copepods have been identified. Nine species associations were determined and have enabled us, (1) to improve the ecological partitioning of this region, and (2) to identify the main factors that regulate pelagic biodiversity in this area. It is shown that temperature, hydrodynamics, stratification and seasonal variability of the environment are likely to be the main factors contributing to the ecological regulation of diversity of calanoid copepods. The similar geographical pattern evident between currents/water masses and the species associations suggest that the species groups may be used as an environmental indicator to evaluate long-term changes in the marine environment related to climate change and other increasing human-induced influences.
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identifier ISSN: 0171-8630
ispartof Marine ecology. Progress series (Halstenbek), 2002-01, Vol.232, p.179-195
issn 0171-8630
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subjects Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Biodiversity
Biological and medical sciences
Copepoda
Earth Sciences
Fresh water ecosystems
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Geographic regions
Indicator species
Interpolation
Marine
Oceanography
Pixels
Plankton
Sciences of the Universe
Sea water ecosystems
Seas
Species
Species diversity
Synecology
Taxa
title Diversity of calanoid copepods in the North Atlantic and adjacent seas: species associations and biogeography
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