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Decapod community composition is seasonally driven by different environmental factors in an estuarine-coastal gradient (Eastern Brazil)

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Oliveira-Filho, Ronaldo R. ; Antunes, Mariana ; Musiello-Fernandes, Joelson ; Gueron, Rodrigo ; Pichler, Helen Audrey ; Vilar, Ciro Colodetti ; Mantelatto, Fernando L. ; Joyeux, Jean-Christophe ; Chiquieri, Julien ; Hostim-Silva, Mauricio ; Bauman, David
Total Authors: 11
Document type: Journal article
Source: REGIONAL STUDIES IN MARINE SCIENCE; v. 85, p. 12-pg., 2025-07-01.
Abstract

Crustacean communities are shaped by a series of ecological processes, but the degree to which different spatial and environmental dimensions affect them in surrounding estuarine-coastal gradients remains unclear. Here we analyzed decapod community data (crabs and shrimps) from the Doce River estuary and its adjacent marine coast, to test and quantify the effects that spatial and environmental factors have had on these communities three years after the Fundao mining dam failure of November 2015. We sampled communities monthly from October 2018 to September 2019 in 18 sampling sites distributed in three zones (estuary, nearshore, and offshore), resulting in 216 samples and 29 recorded taxa. Spatial eigenvector-based methods and variation partitioning approaches were used to test and quantify the pure and joint effects of spatial and environmental processes on the communities over different seasons. The spatial structures of the community composition presented differences among the four studied seasons, being driven by environmental heterogeneity as well as spatial processes unrelated to our measured variables (temperature, salinity, depth, turbidity, dissolved oxygen and pH). Specifically, the species composition and species richness responded the most to turbidity, pH, and depth during the rainy seasons, as well as salinity during the dry seasons. The variability of decapod composition surrounding the Doce River mouth is seasonally affected by a different set of environmental and spatial factors, with low intrusions of saltwater in the estuarine sector impacting the distribution of stenohaline marine species. Our results both partly uncover and emphasize the complexity resulting from environmental heterogeneity and anthropic pressures, stressing the need for further studies on local spatio-temporal dynamics of decapod fauna and other organisms to inform conservation and management actions. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 18/13685-5 - Integrative analysis of the Brazilian fauna of decapod crustaceans: taxonomy, phylogenetic systematics, spermiotaxonomy, morphology of post-embryonic development, ecology and conservation
Grantee:Fernando Luis Medina Mantelatto
Support Opportunities: BIOTA-FAPESP Program - Thematic Grants