Marine Nearshore Biodiversity: Introduction to the Special Issue

Millions are nourished, economies are fueled, and culture is inspired—these are just a few of the extraordinary benefits stemming from the coastal waters adjoining the shorelines of the world [...]

extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.
The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.
Diversity 2023, 15, x FOR PEER REVIEW 2 of 5 extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.[2], [4], [6], [7], [9], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.[2], [4], [6], [7], [9], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.[2], [4], [6], [7], [9], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.[6], [7], [9], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.[6], [7], [9], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.[6], [7], [9], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.[6], [7], [9], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.[6], [7], [9], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.[2], [4], [6], [7], [9], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, extend the current knowledge of the biogeography of roseobacters in polar marine waters.Interestingly, bipolar distributions exist and with others endemic to either the Antarctic or Arctic.Since GTA-related gene transfer is widely considered a mechanism for maintaining metabolic flexibility in changing conditions, these discoveries may relate to the adaptation of Roseobacter g5 clades to polar environments.The importance of local oceanographic features in shaping marine nearshore biodiversity cannot be overstated.In the Gulf of Maine, Trott [7] shows that the similarity of rocky intertidal species assemblages is correlated with latitude and is distinguishable into two groups that correspond with the two principal branches of the Gulf of Maine Coastal Current.Thermogeography of the nearshore is largely influenced by these hydrographic features, and the dissimilarity of the two Gulf regions is significantly related to temperature.Consequences of the rapid warming of the Gulf of Maine [8] on rocky intertidal community patterns are forecast as species range shifts and non-native species introductions disrupt assemblage composition and community dynamics.
Marine nearshore biodiversity can be difficult to estimate, particularly in subtidal habitats located in environments that challenge costs for sampling associated with accessibility, time, and expense.Adapting the rover diver method for non-destructive sampling of benthic taxa, Bravo et al. [9] successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of this sampling procedure when paired with photography in kelp forests at the sub-Antarctic Bécasses Island, located in the Beagle Channel, Argentina.Their innovative use of the citizen science platform iNaturalist to archive photographs, thus creating records of species occurrence, permits transparency in taxonomic curation and facilitates data sharing.Long-term monitoring of subtidal benthos like that associated with kelp forests, globally threatened by climate change [10], can use this approach for cost-effective surveys and reporting.[2], [4], [6], [7], [9], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, [16].
Regional-scale management strategies to mitigate the degradation of nearshore habitats and diversity rely on similarly scaled observations and not ones from only one or a few locations.Steneck and Torres [11] present differences in trends among Caribbean coral reefs monitored for health in six regions within three sectors of the Dominican Republic coastline for 7 years.Country-wide declines in coral cover and reef fish are shown, most steep for reefs once among the Caribbean's best.However, the degree of negative trends is not the same among all sectors, a result that can steer management and continued monitoring.The abundant and increasing macroalgal cover that seriously interferes with reef recovery from disturbances could be mitigated by beneficial gains from improved fishery management.
Knowledge gaps from understudied habitats and taxa compromise the assessment of biodiversity, the detection of change, and extinction in extreme cases.Worldwide, marine flatworms, i.e., polyclads, present a prime example of this situation, where the dearth of basic ecological knowledge for this taxonomically challenging group, like habitat preferences, seriously hinders an accurate evaluation of species occurrence and richness.Tosetto et al. [12] tackle this problem in surveys of intertidal boulder beaches in southeastern Australia and report distribution patterns related to beach exposure, boulder size, and latitude.Their work constitutes one of the few studies of this kind for marine polyclads and will stimulate more investigations of these understudied predators.
There are few pan-Arctic studies focused on nearshore biodiversity.These are of particular need considering the rapid environmental alterations to polar seas resulting from climate change.With so few works to date, the scarce knowledge of this region has fueled some disagreement about nearshore community structure.Denisenko and Denisenko [13] settle a long-standing debate about the degree that bryozoans contribute to benthic biomass in coastal regions of the Arctic by evaluating samples spanning 43 years of collection throughout the Eurasian seas prior to the onset of rapid warming.They reveal biogeographic patterns in the distribution of dominant, key-biomass species related to oceanography and bottom type.The intensive coastal erosion of permafrost and consequential increase in turbidity in some regions may influence colony growth in shallow depths by interfering with suspension feeding.
Many monitoring programs aim to assess nearshore biodiversity and changes due to societal impacts, but surveys can be costly, and the taxonomic identification of retrieved organisms is time intensive.Since some habitats like hard bottom communities are difficult to sample, this problem is approached by deploying artificial substrates and monitoring their colonization.Using a cost-effective and innovative molecular approach, Leite et al. [14] compare hard-bottom macrozoobenthic species colonization of different standardized structures.They report that shape and structural complexity strongly affect colonization, with some taxa exclusively colonizing more dimensionally rich simulated seaweed.Monitoring programs using artificial structures can better assess biodiversity when habitat complexity is modelled by more than one kind of artificial substrate at a time.
Marine organisms with life histories characterized by alternation between generations with stages that are strikingly different in appearance pose challenges to ecologist and taxonomists alike, particularly when only one form is known, or each stage has been described as a different species.These situations can lead to a mismeasure of biodiversity and misrepresent biogeography.Focusing on Pacific and Atlantic Canada shores, Saunders and Brodie [15] use taxon-targeted metabarcoding to explore these domains for red algae in the order Bangiales, for which only the cryptic sporophyte (Conchocelis) stage is known.Their work extends the vertical (depth), host, and biogeographical ranges of an asexual Conchocelis-only species and uncovers known and possibly new species among their samples.Taxon-targeted metabarcoding is forecast to bring significant gains in understanding bangialean ecology and reveal its dark contribution to nearshore biodiversity.
Habitat-forming species, ecosystem engineers, enhance species colonization and increase biodiversity.Kelps, corals, and mussels are a few examples.Rhodoliths, free-living nodules of coralline red algae, can aggregate under favorable conditions to form rhodolith beds, dimensionally complex benthic habitats supporting highly diverse communities in otherwise somewhat featureless bottoms.In a sub-Arctic rhodolith bed, Bélanger and Gagnon [16] track the variability in structural complexity and macrofaunal diversity for nearly a year.In addition to relating macrofaunal diversity to rhodolith complexity, the unprecedented fine taxonomic resolution of their study supports the notion that rhodolith beds are biodiversity hotspots.Changes in macrofauna abundance are due to seasonality, but a disturbance from sporadic intensive physical forcing from storms, for example, can rework beds.The predicted intensification of wind and wave storms may pose challenges to the resilience of these biodiverse habitats.
Global biodiversity is facing an extinction crisis, the Sixth Mass Extinction [17].But if comparisons of numbers of publications on topics make sound evaluations of importance, the wealth of papers devoted to estimating the number of species in the world oceans published in the past few decades (for examples [18,19]) assigns the topic of marine extinctions second place at best.This observation defies a common sense of importance and urgency for knowledge.Both topics confront the difficulty of observing (or not) organisms that are "hidden" beneath the ocean waves, so what makes the study of marine extinctions so different?Carlton [20] answers the hidden complexity of this otherwise simple question by providing reasons for the resistance to declare marine invertebrate species extinct.His call for inventories of globally missing marine invertebrates provides practical guidelines to sway the current state of affairs largely driven by global authority definitions of extinction and absence of evidence.
Investigations of marine nearshore biodiversity are needed now more than ever, the situation fueled by the predicted changes in ocean climates driven by societal impacts.The collection of papers in this Special Issue address many of the most vital topics related to this invitation.They provide a source of inspiration for further research to help understand and guide decisions about global changes in marine nearshore biodiversity.

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.Nearshore study areas investigated by authors published in this Special Issue.Symbol and reference: