Despite the obvious negative effects caused by invasive species, some recent studies have shown that the impacts at local scale are diverse and not necessarily negative. Arborescent benthic organisms such as octocorals form three-dimensional structures capable of increasing the amount of substrate available and providing shelter for epibiont species. We investigated the role of the alien octocoral on the diversity of benthic communities in three shipwrecks on the north-eastern coast of Brazil. We expected that (a) the fauna associated with the octocoral are richer and more diverse compared to the adjacent; (b) some species are exclusively associated with ; (c) the species that are present both in the areas with and without have a greater abundance when associated with the octocoral. For this, we compared the macrobenthic communities associated with to those found in adjacent areas where the octocoral was absent. Our study showed that the communities associated with the octocoral were 1.5 times richer and 10 times more abundant than adjacent communities, with 29 exclusive taxa. The dominant taxa were the amphipods and and polychaetes of the family Syllidae. These taxa were present in areas with presence and absence of , but their abundance was significantly greater where the octocoral was present. Our results reinforce the idea that acts as an ecosystem engineer in coastal reefs, creating new habitats and increasing diversity at a local scale, even though it is an alien species.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8497147 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10452-021-09908-8 | DOI Listing |
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