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Land-use intensification systematically alters the size structure of aquatic communities in the Neotropics
Authors:Giovanna Collyer  Daniel M. Perkins  Danielle K. Petsch  Tadeu Siqueira  Victor Saito
Affiliation:1. Graduate Program in Environmental Sciences, Federal University of São Carlos, São Carlos, Brazil;2. School of Life and Health Sciences, University of Roehampton, London, UK;3. Oceanography and Limnology Department, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, Brazil;4. Institute of Biosciences, São Paulo State University (UNESP), Rio Claro, Brazil;5. Environmental Sciences Department, Federal University of São Carlos, São Carlos, Brazil
Abstract:
Land-use and land-cover transitions can affect biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in a myriad of ways, including how energy is transferred within food-webs. Size spectra (i.e. relationships between body size and biomass or abundance) provide a means to assess how food-webs respond to environmental stressors by depicting how energy is transferred from small to larger organisms. Here, we investigated changes in the size spectrum of aquatic macroinvertebrates along a broad land-use intensification gradient (from Atlantic Forest to mechanized agriculture) in 30 Brazilian streams. We expected to find a steeper size spectrum slope and lower total biomass in more disturbed streams due to higher energetic expenditure in physiologically stressful conditions, which has a disproportionate impact on large individuals. As expected, we found that more disturbed streams had fewer small organisms than pristine forest streams, but, surprisingly, they had shallower size spectrum slopes, which indicates that energy might be transferred more efficiently in disturbed streams. Disturbed streams were also less taxonomically diverse, suggesting that the potentially higher energy transfer in these webs might be channelled via a few efficient trophic links. However, because total biomass was higher in pristine streams, these sites still supported a greater number of larger organisms and longer food chains (i.e. larger size range). Our results indicate that land-use intensification decreases ecosystem stability and enhances vulnerability to population extinctions by reducing the possible energetic pathways while enhancing efficiency between the remaining food-web linkages. Our study represents a step forward in understanding how land-use intensification affects trophic interactions and ecosystem functioning in aquatic systems.
Keywords:aquatic insects  benthic macroinvertebrates  energy transfer  food-web  freshwater ecosystems  individual size distributions  land-use intensification  length–mass equation  macroecology  metabolic theory
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