Understanding the relationship between biodiversity and stability is a central issue in ecology. This is particularly needed under current scenariosof biodiversity loss due to multiple anthropogenic stressors. In this study, we experimentally examined the combined effects of the loss of key functional species (canopy-forming macroalgae) and mechanical disturbance on macroalgal intertidal assemblages at 2 sites along the rocky coast of northern Portugal. We tested themodel that the canopy may buffer the effects of disturbance on associated organisms, leading to the logical hypothesis that effects of mechanical disturbance would be lower where the canopy was left intact compared to patches where it was experimentally removed. The proposed model was supported by multivariate and univariate results, as both differences in the structure of whole assemblages and in the abundance of individual taxa between disturbed and undisturbed assemblages werereduced or prevented by the presence of the canopy, independently of the examined site. Specifically, only in the absence of thecanopy did disturbance determine a decrease in the abundance of the red alga Ahnfeltiopsis devoniensis and an increase in articulated coralline algae of the genus Corallina. Present findings have relevantimplications for understanding and predicting the consequences of multiple factors responsible for the erosion of biodiversity occurringgloballyin coastal areas, as current rates of loss of canopy-formingspecies in urban areas may be expected to exacerbate the effects of predicted climate change, including modifications inintensity and temporal patterns of storms. © Inter-Research 2010.
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Bertocci, I., Arenas, F., Matias, M., Vaselli, S., Araújo, R., Abreu, H., … Sousa-Pinto, I. (2010). Canopy-forming species mediate the effects of disturbance onmacroalgal assemblages on Portuguese rocky shores. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 414, 107–116. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps08729