4.6 Article

Ecological relevance of non-perennial rivers for the conservation of terrestrial and aquatic communities

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13982

Keywords

aquatic macroinvertebrates; birds; carabid beetles; diatoms; intermittent rivers; Marxan; Mediterranean rivers; non-perennial rivers; riparian vegetation; aves; diatomeas; escarabajos carabidos; macroinvertebrados acuaticos; Marxan; rios intermitentes; rios mediterraneos; rios no permanentes; vegetacion riberena

Funding

  1. Seneca Foundation [20645/JLI/18]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [RTI2018-097950-B-C22]
  3. Junta de Andalucia
  4. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [RYC2020-029829-I]
  5. Juan de la Cierva -Incoporacion [IJC2018-036642-I]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study evaluated the conservation value of nonperennial rivers and streams in one of Europe's driest regions, finding that these rivers and streams have higher conservation value when considering both aquatic and terrestrial taxa, highlighting the need to integrate terrestrial and aquatic communities to ensure the conservation of NPRS.
River conservation efforts traditionally focus on perennial watercourses (i.e., those that do not dry) and their associated aquatic biodiversity. However, most of the global river network is not perennial and thus supports both aquatic and terrestrial biodiversity. We assessed the conservation value of nonperennial rivers and streams (NPRS) in one of Europe's driest regions based on aquatic (macroinvertebrates, diatoms) and terrestrial (riparian plants, birds, and carabid beetles) community data. We mapped the distribution of taxa at 90 locations and across wide environmental gradients. Using the systematic planning tool Marxan, we identified priority conservation sites under 2 scenarios: aquatic taxa alone or aquatic and terrestrial taxa together. We explored how environmental factors (runoff, flow intermittence, elevation, salinity, anthropogenic impact) influenced Marxan's site selection frequency. The NPRS were selected more frequently (over 13% on average) than perennial rivers when both aquatic and terrestrial taxa were considered, suggesting that NPRS have a high conservation value at the catchment scale. We detected an underrepresentation of terrestrial taxa (8.4-10.6% terrestrial vs. 0.5-1.1% aquatic taxa were unrepresented in most Marxan solutions) when priority sites were identified based exclusively on aquatic biodiversity, which points to a low surrogacy value of aquatic taxa for terrestrial taxa. Runoff explained site selection when focusing on aquatic taxa (all best-fitting models included runoff, r(2) = 0.26-0.27), whereas elevation, salinity, and flow intermittence were more important when considering both groups. In both cases, site selection frequency declined as anthropogenic impact increased. Our results highlight the need to integrate terrestrial and aquatic communities when identifying priority areas for conservation in catchments with NPRS. This is key to overcoming drawbacks of traditional assessments based only on aquatic taxa and to ensure the conservation of NPRS, especially as NPRS become more prevalent worldwide due to climate change and increasing water demands.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available