The taxonomic distinctness of coastal bottom-dwelling fish communities of the North-east Atlantic

Citation
Si. Rogers et al., The taxonomic distinctness of coastal bottom-dwelling fish communities of the North-east Atlantic, J ANIM ECOL, 68(4), 1999, pp. 769-782
Citations number
47
Categorie Soggetti
Animal Sciences
Journal title
JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
ISSN journal
00218790 → ACNP
Volume
68
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
769 - 782
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8790(199907)68:4<769:TTDOCB>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
41. New techniques for identifying the average taxonomic range of species a ssemblages were applied to an extensive dataset of bottom-dwelling fish in the coastal waters of NW Europe. These taxonomic distinctness indices provi ded much greater resolution than traditional diversity indices as they inco rporated information on taxonomic relationships into an index which measure s species dominance. Unlike standard measures of species richness and diver sity, the mean value of these statistics is independent of sampling effort, and this allows objective comparisons to be made between samples from stud ies where sampling effort is not standardized. 2. A reduction in the average taxonomic range between the fauna of western waters of the UK and that of the southern North Sea was consistent with the general decline in species richness observed between these regions, and su ggests that these two factors may be spatially positively correlated. Indic es calculated for individual samples of fish on a local scale, however, did not all fit this trend. 3. Much of the variability in taxonomic diversity within the coastal waters of NW Europe was caused by the variable geographical distribution of the e lasmobranchs. Of all the families which comprise the fish communities, this group has life-history characteristics which make it most susceptible to i mpact by commercial trawl fisheries. 4. The use of taxonomic distinctness measures provided additional insights, of relevance to biodiversity assessment, suggesting that they might useful ly be applied to other aquatic and terrestrial fauna.