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Taxonomic and functional diversity of stream invertebrates along an environmental stress gradient
Affiliation:1. Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt, Department of River Ecology and Conservation, Clamecy Strasse 12, 63571 Gelnhausen, Germany;2. Johann Wolfgang Goethe University of Frankfurt am Main, 60629 Frankfurt am Main, Germany;3. Oregon State University, Department of Integrative Biology, 3029 Cordley Hall, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA;4. University of Duisburg-Essen, Faculty of Biology, Universitätsstrasse 5, 45141 Essen, Germany;1. Department of Geography, University of the Balearic Islands, Palma, Balears, Spain;2. School of Environmental and Geographical Sciences, University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus, Jalan Broga, Selangor, Malaysia;3. Department of Ecology and Animal Biology, University of Vigo, Vigo, Spain;4. Fluvial Dynamics Research Group – RIUS, University of Lleida, Lleida, Catalonia, Spain;5. Catalan Institute for Water Research, Girona, Catalonia, Spain;6. Faculty of Forest Sciences and Natural Resources, Austral University of Chile, Valdivia, Chile
Abstract:Anthropogenic stress has been identified as main driver of freshwater biodiversity loss. Adverse effects on the biodiversity of freshwater organisms, such as macroinvertebrates, may propagate to associated ecosystem functions, such as organic matter breakdown (OMB). In this context, the functional diversity (FD) of communities has been suggested to be a more suitable predictor of changes in ecosystem functions than taxonomic diversity (TD). We investigated the response of TD and FD of invertebrate communities to an environmental stress gradient and the relation of both metrics to the rate of organic matter breakdown. For this, we sampled macroinvertebrates and determined OMB using leaf bags along an environmental stress gradient (i.e. changes in physicochemical and hydromorphological conditions) in 29 low-order streams. Taxonomic richness decreased with increasing environmental stress (r = −0.55) but was not related to OMB. Conversely, the Simpson diversity of communities was not associated with the gradient but correlated moderately (r = 0.41) with OMB. Of three functional diversity indices (functional richness, evenness and divergence), only functional richness correlated moderately with the stress gradient (r = −0.41) and any of the indices correlated with OMB. Nevertheless, functional metrics such as specific trait modalities and the total abundance of the dominant shredders correlated higher (r = 0.46 and 0.48) with OMB than the TD indices. Given a relatively small species pool in our study and methodical constraints such as the limited resolution of autecological information, the FD might perform better in other contexts and if focusing on response and effect traits for the stressor and ecosystem function under scrutiny, respectively.
Keywords:Leaf decomposition  Land-use  Pollution  Rivers  Ecosystem processes
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