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Kelp species function as important foundation organisms in coastal marine ecosystems where they provide biogenic habitat and ameliorate environmental conditions, often facilitating the development of diverse understorey assemblages. The structure of kelp forests is influenced by a variety of environmental factors, changes in which can result in profound shifts in ecological structure and functioning. Intense storm-induced wave action in particular, can severely impact kelp forest ecosystems. Given that storms are anticipated to increase in frequency and intensity in response to anthropogenic climate change, it is critical to understand their potential impacts on kelp forest ecosystems. During the 2021/22 northeast Atlantic storm season, the United Kingdom (UK) was subject to several intense storms, of which the first and most severe was Storm Arwen. Due to the unusual northerly wind direction, the greatest impacts of Storm Arwen were felt along the northeast coast of the UK where wind gusts exceeded 90 km/h, and inshore significant wave heights of 7.2 m and wave periods of 9.3 s were recorded. Here, we investigated temporal and spatial variation in the structure of L. hyperborea forests and associated understorey assemblages along the northeast coast of the UK over the 2021/22 storm season. We found significant changes in the cover, density, length, biomass, and age structure of L. hyperborea populations and the composition of understorey assemblages following the storm season, particularly at our most north facing site. We suggest continuous monitoring of these systems to further our understanding of temporal variation and potential recovery trajectories, alongside enhanced management to promote resilience to future perturbations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106652 | DOI Listing |
J Anim Ecol
July 2025
Department of Plant Sciences and Centre for Global Wood Security, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Selective logging is a major driver of tropical land-use change, causing reductions in forest specialist species with concurrent increases in edge-tolerant species. A key question is understanding how selective logging impacts co-occurrence and assembly mechanisms in vertebrate communities as forests recover post-logging. Using a 10-year, repeat-sample study of understorey bird species in Borneo, we compare the structure of species co-occurrences over time between old-growth unlogged and logged forests, investigating the roles of functional traits and local abundance in driving co-occurrence patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anim Ecol
July 2025
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama, Panama.
Soil phosphorus (P) drives productivity and floristic composition across tropical forest landscapes, but equivalent links between soil P and tropical forest fauna remain poorly understood. We evaluated soil P as a driver of understorey Coleoptera and epigeal arthropod assemblages across a natural landscape-level soil fertility gradient and at an adjacent site-level P fertilisation experiment in central Panama. A fifth of Coleoptera families in flight-intercept traps (corresponding to 10%-55% [range of values across 10 sites] of all specimens), a third of litter-extracted Coleoptera families (7%-86% of specimens), and almost half of litter-extracted fauna orders (20%-69% of specimens) displayed significant abundance trends across the natural fertility gradient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Environ Res
September 2024
The Dove Marine Laboratory, School of Natural and Environmental Sciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, NE1 7RU, UK.
Kelp species function as important foundation organisms in coastal marine ecosystems where they provide biogenic habitat and ameliorate environmental conditions, often facilitating the development of diverse understorey assemblages. The structure of kelp forests is influenced by a variety of environmental factors, changes in which can result in profound shifts in ecological structure and functioning. Intense storm-induced wave action in particular, can severely impact kelp forest ecosystems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiodivers Data J
April 2023
Zoology Branch, Forest Biodiversity Division, Forest Research Institute Malaysia (FRIM), 52109, Kepong, Selangor Darul Ehsan, Malaysia Zoology Branch, Forest Biodiversity Division, Forest Research Institute Malaysia (FRIM) 52109, Kepong, Selangor Darul Ehsan Malaysia.
Environmentally Sensitive Areas (ESA) refer to areas that are of critical importance in terms of ecosystem services such as goods, services and life-support systems, such as water purification, pest control and erosion regulation. In addition, they also refer to areas that harbour the wealth of the nation's biodiversity. However, the classification of ESA in Malaysia is incomprehensible and lacks weightage on biological elements as the current classification is more centred on physical attributes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Bot
March 2024
BioCost Research Group, Facultad de Ciencias, and CICA - Centro Interdisciplinar de Química e Bioloxía, Universidad de A Coruña, A Coruña, Spain.
Background And Aims: Kelps are the primary foundation species in temperate subtidal rocky shores worldwide. However, global change is causing their decline with consequences for the organisms that rely on them. An accurate assessment of these consequences may depend on which attributes of the associated community are considered.
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