Piñeiro-Corbeira, CristinaBarrientos, SaraProvera, IsabellaGarcía, Manuel EnriqueDíaz-Tapia, P.Peña, VivianaBárbara, IgnacioBarreiro, Rodolfo2025-04-242025-04-242023-10-10Cristina Piñeiro-Corbeira, Sara Barrientos, Isabella Provera, Manuel E García, Pilar Díaz-Tapia, Viviana Peña, Ignacio Bárbara, Rodolfo Barreiro, Kelp forests collapse reduces understorey seaweed β-diversity, Annals of Botany, Volume 133, Issue 1, 1 January 2024, Pages 93–1041095-8290http://hdl.handle.net/2183/41873Financiado para publicación en acceso aberto: Universidade da Coruña/CISUG[Abstract] Background and Aims Kelps are the primary foundation species in temperate subtidal rocky shores world-wide. However, global change is causing their decline with consequences for the organisms that rely on them. An accurate assessment of these consequences may depend on which attributes of the associated community are considered. This study shows that conventional α-diversity approaches may overlook some of these consequences compared to spatially explicit approaches such as with β-diversity. A 1-year seasonal study was conducted to compare the macroalgal understorey between healthy reefs with a Laminaria ochroleuca canopy and degraded reefs where the canopy collapsed years ago due to excessive fish herbivory. At each reef, the understorey seaweed assemblage was recorded in five replicate quadrats to estimate α-diversity (total richness, species density, Shannon index) and β-diversity (intra- and inter-reef scale). The understorey assemblage exhibited a distinct seasonal dynamic in both healthy and degraded reefs. α-Diversity attributes increased in spring and summer; turf-forming algae were particularly dominant in degraded reefs during summer. β-Diversity also showed seasonal variability, but mostly due to the changes in degraded reefs. None of the α-diversity estimates differed significantly between healthy and degraded reefs. In contrast, spatial β-diversity was significantly lower in degraded reefs. Although the loss of the kelp canopy affected the composition of the macroalgal understorey, none of the conventional indicators of α-diversity detected significant differences between healthy and degraded reefs. In contrast, small-scale spatial β-diversity decreased significantly as a result of deforestation, suggesting that the loss of kelp canopy may not significantly affect the number of species but still have an effect on their spatial arrangement. Our results suggest that small-scale β-diversity may be a good proxy for a more comprehensive assessment of the consequences of kelp forest decline.engAtribución 3.0 España© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/Laminaria ochroleucaβ-diversityKelp forestTurf-forming speciesUnderstoreyKelp Forests Collapse Reduces Understorey Seaweed Β-Diversityjournal articleopen access