4.7 Article

Dispersal as a limiting factor in the colonization of restored mountain streams by plants and macroinvertebrates

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
Volume 48, Issue 5, Pages 1241-1250

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2011.02026.x

Keywords

benthic invertebrates; colonization success; dispersal ability; dispersal limitation; recolonization; regional species pool; riparian flora and fauna; stream restoration; vegetation

Funding

  1. European Union [GOCE-CT-2003-505540]
  2. Hesse's Ministry of Higher Education, Research, and the Arts
  3. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)

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1. Over the past centuries, European streams have been heavily influenced by humans through pollution and regulation. As a result, the quality and diversity of freshwater riparian habitats have declined strongly, and the diversity of riparian flora and fauna has decreased. Recent restoration measures have resulted in stream habitat improvements, but biodiversity improvements have failed to follow in fragmented streams. It has been suggested that dispersal limitation could play an important role in the lack of biodiversity improvement in restored streams, but to date, there is no conclusive evidence for this assumption. 2. In this study, we investigated whether colonization of restored streams by plants and macroinvertebrates is limited by dispersal. We hypothesized that colonization success increases with increasing availability of (nearby) source populations and with increasing ability of species to disperse over long distances. We related species composition in seven restored stream sections to species' abundances in the surroundings and to species' dispersal abilities. 3. For both plants and macroinvertebrates, colonization success is strongly related to the abundance of species in the local and regional species pools. 4. For plants, dispersal strategy has an additional influence on colonization success: short-lived plants with high production of small, well-dispersed seeds colonized best within the 3- to 5-year period after restoration. 5. The existence of dispersal strategy constraints could not be confirmed in macroinvertebrates, possibly because these are limited by a lack of connectivity on larger spatial scales. On the landscape scale, beneficial effects of increased plant diversity might further improve habitat suitability for macroinvertebrates. 6. Synthesis and applications. Dispersal appears to be a limiting factor for successful (re)colonization of restored streams in fragmented landscapes. In plants, this is attributed to limitations in seed dispersal abilities and likely to a lack of nearby source populations as well. In macroinvertebrates, lack of nearby source populations may also be a limiting factor. Hence, we suggest restoring landscape connectivity at larger spatial scales and optimizing the availability of near-natural 'source' areas in the vicinity of restoration projects, at least for plants, to improve the success of biodiversity restoration in fragmented habitats.

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