Differences in rocky reef habitats related to human disturbances across a latitudinal gradient.

Mar Environ Res

Department of Marine Sciences, University of Puerto Rico-Mayagüez, PO Box 9000, Mayagüez, PR 00681-9000, Puerto Rico.

Published: August 2017

This study tested for differences in the composition of intertidal and shallow subtidal rocky reef habitats subjected to a range of human pressures across ∼1000 km of coastline in New South Wales, Australia over 5 years. Percentage covers of habitats were sampled using aerial photography and a large grain size (20 m intertidal; 800 m subtidal) in a nested hierarchical design. Results were consistent with anthropogenic impacts on habitat structure only around estuaries with the most heavily urbanised or agriculturally-intense catchments. The most convincing relationships documented here related to environmental variables such as SST, latitude, reef width and proximity to large estuaries irrespective of human disturbance levels. Moreover, there were suggestions that any influences of estuarine waters (be they anthropogenic or natural) on reef assemblages could potentially extend 10s of kilometres from major estuaries. In general, our results supported those of studies that utilised smaller grain sizes (greatest variability often at smallest spatial scales), but we found that variability over scales of 100s of km can be similar to or greater than variability over scales of 10s of metres.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2017.06.014DOI Listing

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