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Large biogeographical shifts in marine communities are taking place in response to climate change and biological invasions yet we still lack a full understanding of their diversity and distribution. An important example of this is turf and foliose algae that are key coastal primary producers in several regions and are expanding into new environments. Traditionally, monitoring turf and foliose algae communities involves species identification based on morphological traits, which is challenging due to their reduced dimensions and highly variable morphology. Molecular methods promise to revolutionise this field, but their effectiveness in detecting turf and foliose algae has yet to be tested. Here, we evaluate the performance of DNA metabarcoding (COI and rbcL markers) and morphological identification (in situ and photoquadrat) to describe intertidal turf and foliose algae communities along the Portuguese coast. Both molecular markers detected more taxa than the morphological methods and showed greater discrimination of turf and foliose algae communities between regions, matching our knowledge of the geographical and climatic patterns for the region. In sum, our multi-marker metabarcoding approach was more efficient than morphology-based methods in characterising turf and foliose algae communities along the Portuguese coast, differentiating morphologically similar species, and detecting unicellular organisms. However, certain taxa that were identified by in situ and photoquadrat approaches were not detected through metabarcoding, partly due to lack of reference barcodes or taxonomic resolution. Metabarcoding emerges as a valuable tool for monitoring these communities, particularly in long-term programmes requiring accuracy, speed, and reproducibility.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.14115 | DOI Listing |
Mol Ecol Resour
October 2025
BIOPOLIS Program in Genomics, Biodiversity and Land Planning, CIBIO, Campus de Vairão, Vila do Conde, Portugal.
Large biogeographical shifts in marine communities are taking place in response to climate change and biological invasions yet we still lack a full understanding of their diversity and distribution. An important example of this is turf and foliose algae that are key coastal primary producers in several regions and are expanding into new environments. Traditionally, monitoring turf and foliose algae communities involves species identification based on morphological traits, which is challenging due to their reduced dimensions and highly variable morphology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcology
June 2021
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama City, Republic of Panama.
Communities are shaped by a variety of ecological and environmental processes, each acting at different spatial scales. Seminal research on rocky shores highlighted the effects of consumers as local determinants of primary productivity and community assembly. However, it is now clear that the species interactions shaping communities at local scales are themselves regulated by large-scale oceanographic processes that generate regional variation in resource availability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Biol Sci
December 2020
Marine Spatial Ecology Lab, School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia.
Sedimentation and overfishing are important local stressors on coral reefs that can independently result in declines in coral recruitment and shifts to algal-dominated states. However, the role of herbivory in driving recovery across environmental gradients is often unclear. Here we investigate early successional benthic communities and coral recruitment across a sediment gradient in Palau, Micronesia over a 12-month period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
August 2018
Instituto de Biologia, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Most coral reefs have recently experienced acute changes in benthic community structure, generally involving dominance shifts from slow-growing hard corals to fast-growing benthic invertebrates and fleshy photosynthesizers. Besides overfishing, increased nutrification and sedimentation are important drivers of this process, which is well documented at landscape scales in the Caribbean and in the Indo-Pacific. However, small-scale processes that occur at the level of individual organisms remain poorly explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOecologia
May 2017
Department of Biology and Marine Biology, Center for Marine Science, University of North Carolina Wilmington, 601 S. College Road, Wilmington, NC, 28401, USA.
Dietary preferences of grazers can drive spatial variability in top-down control of autotroph communities, because diet composition may depend on the relative availability of autotroph species. On Caribbean coral reefs, parrotfish grazing is important in limiting macroalgae, but parrotfish dietary preferences are poorly understood. We applied diet-switching analysis to quantify the foraging preferences of the redband parrotfish (Sparisoma aurofrenatum).
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