2010
DOI: 10.1890/09-0087.1
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Habitat heterogeneity, disturbance, and productivity work in concert to regulate biodiversity in deep submarine canyons

Abstract: Habitat heterogeneity is a major structuring agent of ecological assemblages promoting beta diversity and ultimately contributing to overall higher global diversity. The exact processes by which heterogeneity increases diversity are scale dependent and encompass variation in other well-known processes, e.g., productivity, disturbance, and temperature. Thus, habitat heterogeneity likely triggers multiple and cascading diversity effects through ecological assemblages. Submarine canyons, a pervasive feature of th… Show more

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Cited by 204 publications
(180 citation statements)
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“…Smallwood et al (1999), Ginger et al (2001) and Witbaard et al (2001), suggested that megafauna can significantly affect the food resources available to the rest of the benthos. McClain and Barry (2010) also suggested that megafauna are important habitat modifiers in the deep sea affecting macrofauna biodiversity. They showed a high fauna turnover and changes in the community structure at scales <100 m, and often <10 m related to geographic features on the Monterey Canyon.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Smallwood et al (1999), Ginger et al (2001) and Witbaard et al (2001), suggested that megafauna can significantly affect the food resources available to the rest of the benthos. McClain and Barry (2010) also suggested that megafauna are important habitat modifiers in the deep sea affecting macrofauna biodiversity. They showed a high fauna turnover and changes in the community structure at scales <100 m, and often <10 m related to geographic features on the Monterey Canyon.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Uncertainty remains in part because these faunal patterns likely have complex causes, reflecting not only species' present-day tolerances for environmental factors (e.g., temperature, productivity) but also spatial and bathymetric differences in speciation, extinction, and dispersal (Rex et al 2005;Jablonski et al 2006), acting within a biogeographic template (McClain et al 2009b;McClain and Barry 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Highly localized food falls tend to attract large numbers of mollusc individuals [39,40] with highly specific energy requirements [41,42]. Under these conditions, selection for dealing with mate availability, i.e.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%