Diversity of hard-bottom fauna relative to environmental gradients in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6058Date
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
A baseline study of hard-bottom zoobenthos in relation to environmental
gradients in Kongsfjorden, a glacial fjord in Svalbard, is presented, based on
collections from 1996 to 1998. The total species richness in 62 samples from
0 to 30 m depth along five transects was 403 species. Because 32 taxa could not
be identified to species level and because 11 species are probably new to
science, the total number of identified species was 360. Of these, 47 species are
new for Svalbard waters. Bryozoa was the most diverse group. Biogeographic
composition revealed features of both Arctic and sub-Arctic properties of the
fauna. Species richness, frequency of species occurrence, mean abundance and
biomass generally decreased towards the tidal glaciers in inner Kongsfjorden.
Among eight environmental factors, depth was most important for explaining
variance in the composition of the zoobenthos. The diversity was consistently
low at shallow depths, whereas the non-linear patterns of species composition
of deeper samples indicated a transitional zone between surface and deeper
water masses at 15 20 m depth. Groups of ‘‘colonial’’ and ‘‘non-colonial’’
species differed in diversity, biogeographic composition and distribution by
location and depth as well as in relation to other environmental factors. ‘‘Noncolonial’’
species made a greater contribution than ‘‘colonial’’ species to total
species richness, total occurrence and biomass in samples, and were more
influenced by the depth gradient. Biogeographic composition was sensitive to
variation of zoobenthic characteristics over the studied depth range. A list of
recorded species and a description of sampling sites are presented.
Publisher
Norsk Polarinstitutt, OsloCitation
Polar Research (2013), vol. 32:11208Metadata
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