Low abundance and high patchiness of decapod fauna sampled with van Veen grab on the West African continental margin (Gulf of Guinea, Ghana)

•High diversity was recorded on the shelf in an area characterized by high habitat heterogeneity.•A highly patchy distribution of decapods was recorded.•Low abundance and diversity were observed on the slope, an area dominated by silt clay deposits and elevated concentrations of barium and hydrocarb...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oceanologia 2024-04, Vol.66 (2), p.220-238
Hauptverfasser: Podwysocki, Krzysztof, Pabis, Krzysztof, Palero, Ferran, Błażewicz, Magdalena, Serigstad, Bjørn
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•High diversity was recorded on the shelf in an area characterized by high habitat heterogeneity.•A highly patchy distribution of decapods was recorded.•Low abundance and diversity were observed on the slope, an area dominated by silt clay deposits and elevated concentrations of barium and hydrocarbons. Sixty morphospecies of Decapoda (Malacostraca: Crustacea) representing 34 families were recorded in the material collected in 2012 from 265 van Veen grab (0.1 m2) samples, from the nine transects distributed along the coast of Ghana in the 25–1000 m depth range. The examined material was dominated by the Diogenidae, Panopeidae, Leucosiidae, Pilumnidae and Xanthidae families. Species accumulation curves showed undersampling of the studied area and a large number of the morphospecies comprised singletons and doubletons. Panopeus africanus was the most frequent morphospecies in the analysed material (9.1% of all samples). We observed a substantial decrease of diversity (Shannon Index) and abundance along a depth gradient. Species richness also decreased with depth, starting from the highest number of morphospecies ‒ 38 at 25 m depth, then 33 at 50 m, 17 at 100 m, 11 at 250 m, 8 at 500 m and ending with 1 morphospecies at 1000 m bottom depth. Higher diversity was observed on the continental shelf (25–250 m – 57 morphospecies), while on the slope (500–1000 m) only eight morphospecies were recorded. Numerous factors of natural and anthropogenic origin may affect decapod communities on the coast of Ghana. Since our material was collected using a sampler collecting material at a very small scale, the observed patterns might be affected by the sampling method.
ISSN:0078-3234
DOI:10.1016/j.oceano.2023.11.003