In order to study taxon richness, biodiversity and abundance patterns in the North Atlantic from temperate latitudes through Arctic to high Arctic latitudes, we recorded the faunas (at ELWS level) colonizing 20 cobbles from three sites at each of seven boulder-field localities (south-west England, 50°N; Wales, 51°N; west Scotland, 56°N; Iceland, 64°N; Tromsø, 70°N; Svalbard, 77°N, 79°N). Inverse correlations were found between latitude and all measures of richness (species, orders, and phyla numbers) and biodiversity (S–W, P). However, these correlations were driven mostly by the consistently impoverished Arctic sites; an even cline of decreasing diversity from south to north did not exist. Multidimensional scaling revealed two communities,...
Finding evidence for climate change in the sea has been less easy than on land. As ice-loading of ne...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein)The need to understand species distribution- and biodiversity pat...
Boulder communities were studied in summer 2002 in West Spitsbergen fiords. We examined multiple sam...
AIM: The Arctic Ocean is one of the last near-pristine regions on Earth and although human activitie...
Aim The Arctic Ocean is one of the last near-pristine regions on Earth, and, although human activiti...
Based on the North Sea International Bottom Trawl Survey, the number of species recorded after 20 ha...
The contrasting histories of the western and eastern shores of the North Atlantic Ocean provide an e...
Understanding spatial diversity patterns, and factors shaping these patterns, is crucial for conserv...
Colonisation and immigration history is often neglected as a factor when investigating community or ...
A baseline study of hard-bottom zoobenthos in relation to environmental gradients in Kongsfjorden, a...
The evolution and ecology of latitudinal patterns in marine macrofaunal biodiversity and assemblage ...
Abstract: Several studies suggest that assemblages in intertidal zones that experience fre− quent ph...
The rocky shores of the north-east Atlantic have been long studied. Our focus is from Gibraltar to N...
The rocky shores of the north-east Atlantic have been long studied. Our focus is from Gibraltar to N...
Arctic freshwaters support biota adapted to the harsh conditions at these latitudes, but the climate...
Finding evidence for climate change in the sea has been less easy than on land. As ice-loading of ne...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein)The need to understand species distribution- and biodiversity pat...
Boulder communities were studied in summer 2002 in West Spitsbergen fiords. We examined multiple sam...
AIM: The Arctic Ocean is one of the last near-pristine regions on Earth and although human activitie...
Aim The Arctic Ocean is one of the last near-pristine regions on Earth, and, although human activiti...
Based on the North Sea International Bottom Trawl Survey, the number of species recorded after 20 ha...
The contrasting histories of the western and eastern shores of the North Atlantic Ocean provide an e...
Understanding spatial diversity patterns, and factors shaping these patterns, is crucial for conserv...
Colonisation and immigration history is often neglected as a factor when investigating community or ...
A baseline study of hard-bottom zoobenthos in relation to environmental gradients in Kongsfjorden, a...
The evolution and ecology of latitudinal patterns in marine macrofaunal biodiversity and assemblage ...
Abstract: Several studies suggest that assemblages in intertidal zones that experience fre− quent ph...
The rocky shores of the north-east Atlantic have been long studied. Our focus is from Gibraltar to N...
The rocky shores of the north-east Atlantic have been long studied. Our focus is from Gibraltar to N...
Arctic freshwaters support biota adapted to the harsh conditions at these latitudes, but the climate...
Finding evidence for climate change in the sea has been less easy than on land. As ice-loading of ne...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein)The need to understand species distribution- and biodiversity pat...
Boulder communities were studied in summer 2002 in West Spitsbergen fiords. We examined multiple sam...