M. Adjeroud et al., Physical factors of differentiation in macrobenthic communities between atoll lagoons in the Central Tuamotu Archipelago (French Polynesia), MAR ECOL-PR, 196, 2000, pp. 25-38
Nine atolls were characterized in order to understand how physical factors
control the species composition, diversity, and abundance of macrobenthic (
coral, mollusc, echinoderm, and algal) communities inside the lagoons. Only
one region, the central part of Tuamotu Archipelago, French Polynesia, was
considered, in order to minimise the variation due to regional factors bet
ween regions. The lagoons investigated showed a gradient of physical factor
s, providing various landscape configurations. The physical factors were su
rface area, abundance of pinnacles, degree of hydrodynamic aperture, and re
lative importance of passes in this degree of aperture. Macrobenthic commun
ities were characterized by low diversity and strong dominance of a few mol
lusc or echinoderm species that generally occurred in lagoons without passe
s. Correlation analyses indicated that species richness increases with the
surface area of the lagoon. Species richness of corals, echinoderms, and ma
croalgae was also higher in lagoons having numerous pinnacles. Canonical co
rrespondence analyses revealed that the distribution and the relative abund
ance of coral, echinoderm, and macroalgae species were correlated to the re
lative importance of passes, whereas degree of aperture of the lagoon was a
lso relevant for corals and molluscs. The physical factors that control the
processes of water exchange between ocean and lagoon, including passes, su
bmerged reef flats, and spillways, influence the identity and the abundance
of most macrobenthic species inside the lagoons.