Description and Spatial Modelling of Benthic Communities Distribution in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27184Dato
2022-06-29Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Dumais, Philippe-Olivier; Grant, Cindy; Bluhm, Bodil; De Montety, Laure; de Coeli, Lisa Treau; Tremblay, Jean-Éric; Archambault, PhilippeSammendrag
In the Arctic, sea ice loss has already transformed the dominant sources and periodicity of
primary production in some areas, raising concerns over climate change impacts on
benthic communities. Considered to be excellent indicators of environmental changes,
benthic invertebrates play important roles in nutrient cycling, sediment oxygenation and
decomposition. However, this biological component of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago
(CAA) is still somewhat poorly studied compared to other Arctic regions. To partly fill this
need, this study aims to evaluate benthic community composition and its relationship to
significant environmental drivers and to develop spatial predictive explanatory models of
these communities to expand coverage between sampled stations across the Kitikmeot
Sea region and Parry Channel. Results from previously collected samples suggest that
biodiversity is higher in this region compared to the Beaufort and Baffin Seas, two adjacent
regions to the West and East, respectively. This finding leads to the main hypothesis that
(1) benthic communities are succeeding one another, forming an ecotone (transition area)
between the Beaufort Sea and the Baffin Sea. Other hypotheses are that (2) Pacific Ocean
water influence through the CAA can explain part of this gradient, and that (3) terrigenous
inputs affect the distribution of species. Overall, results tend to confirm hypotheses.
Generalized Linear Models (GLMs) (with R2 up to 0.80) clearly displayed a succession in
community distribution from Queen-Maud Gulf (Southwest) to Lancaster Sound
(Northeast). Such models can be useful in identifying potential biodiversity hotspots and
as a baseline for marine spatial planning purposes. Further, Pacific origin water (traced
with concentrations of nitrate relative to phosphate) and terrigenous inputs (traced with
silicate concentrations) were related to species and community distribution. Given that
these two inputs/factors are generally increasing in the Canadian Arctic, their influence on
benthic communities may also be seen to increase in the upcoming years.
Forlag
Frontiers MediaSitering
Dumais, Grant, Bluhm, De Montety, de Coeli, Tremblay, Archambault. Description and Spatial Modelling of Benthic Communities Distribution in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Frontiers in Marine Science. 2022;9Metadata
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