4.6 Article

Environmental filtering and spatial processes equally contributed to macroinvertebrate metacommunity dynamics in the highly urbanized river networks in Shenzhen, South China

Journal

ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s13717-021-00297-2

Keywords

Community assembly; Seasonal variation; Macroinvertebrate metacommunity; Environmental filtering; Spatial processes; Urban river

Funding

  1. program Shenzhen City under the grant of Aquatic Ecological Monitoring and Assessment for Major rivers [2019-07-233]
  2. Special Foundation for National Science and Technology Basic Research Program of China [2019FY101903]

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Our study examined the impacts of ecological factors and seasonal differences on the assembly of macroinvertebrate metacommunities in subtropical urban river networks. The results showed that seasonal variation had minimal effect on macroinvertebrate community composition, with strong influences from both environmental filtering and spatial processes in structuring the metacommunity. Additionally, degraded habitat conditions and water quality were identified as key factors affecting macroinvertebrate communities, emphasizing the importance of improving local abiotic conditions for sustaining biodiversity.
Background Disentangling the relative roles of environmental filtering and spatial processes in structuring ecological communities is a central topic in metacommunity ecology. Metacommunity ecology in the temperate river ecosystems has been well developed, while less attention has been paid to subtropical urban river networks. Here, we examined the ecological factors and seasonal difference in structuring macroinvertebrates metacommunity assembly in the subtropical urban river networks in Shenzhen, South China. Results Our results revealed that there was no significant distinction of macroinvertebrate community composition among seasons, with only the relative abundance of Mollusca and Odonata significantly differed in both wet and dry seasons. One possible explanation was that most macroinvertebrates are generally pollution-tolerant taxa characterized with nonseasonal life cycle. In addition, distance-based redundancy analysis and variation partitioning approach revealed that metacommunity was determined equally by the environmental and dispersal-related factors. Further, our results showed that, although a slight temporal variation of relative contribution, the identity and explanation power of ecological factors were different among seasons. Specifically, stronger environmental filtering structuring community dynamics was observed in the dry than wet seasons, which might be owing to higher environmental heterogeneity under a low water-flow condition. Moreover, we detected that the influence of spatial processes was stronger in the wet than dry seasons, indicating an obvious dispersal processes due to high connectivity among sites. Conclusion Overall, our results revealed that environmental and spatial factors equally explained variations of macroinvertebrate metacommunity, implying the necessity of considering dispersal-related processes structuring ecological communities in river bioassessment programs. Moreover, degraded habitat conditions and water quality were the predominant factors that affected macroinvertebrate communities, indicating the significance and feasibility of improving local abiotic conditions to sustain local biodiversity. Further, our findings revealed the importance of seasonal dynamics of these urban river networks in structuring macroinvertebrate metacommunity. Thereby, our study improves the understanding of ecological processes governing macroinvertebrate metacommunity and underlines the idea that community ecology studies should go beyond the single snapshot survey in river networks.

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