Documenting the effect of substrate angle on invertebrate assembly patterns: An approach for identifying sessile benthic invertebrate assemblages in the San Juan Channel rocky subtidal zone
Abstract
Understanding benthic community distributions, and using such information in
marine restoration ecology, requires an understanding of the effect of substrate angle on
assembly patterns. To date, there is no information regarding in situ identification and
remote identification of sessile benthic invertebrate assemblages on substrate angles from
0° to 90°. This study aimed to document the effect of substrate angle on sessile
invertebrate assemblages and to both develop and validate an approach for remotely
identifying assemblages based on substrate angle. The in situ photoquadrat method was
used to document invertebrate assemblages at five 15 m deep sites in the San Juan
Channel. Substrate angle was recorded for each photo based on six 15° categories.
Univariate and multivariate statistical analyses suggested that there are three distinct
assemblages of invertebrates: horizontal (0-15°), sloping (15-75°), vertical (75-90°).
Crustose coralline algae, non-calcified (maroon) encrusting red algae, encrusting
bryozoans, tube complex (amphipods, polychaetes), and porifera contributed more than
5% to assemblage differences due to angle at all sites. These results necessitate a review
of factors thought to cause differences in assemblages due to substrate angle. The
relationship between species and substrate angle was applied to multibeam echosounder
(MBES) bathymetry data, gridded at 2 m, in ArcGISTM. Transect locations were plotted
and ArcGIS generated slope values. ArcGIS scale was smaller than the photoquadrat
scale; therefore, the scales were not comparable. This technique for remotely identifying
assemblages based on substrate angle may be utilized in the future by following a revised
protocol that includes the collection of bathymetric and photoquadrat data at the similar
Paxton, 3
scales. This approach may be used both in the San Juan Channel and internationally for
restoration and long-term monitoring efforts.
