4.4 Article

Searching for the Achilles heel(s) for maintaining invertebrate biodiversity across complexes of depressional wetlands

Journal

JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION
Volume 72, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnc.2023.126332

Keywords

Beta diversity; Conservation planning; Environmental vulnerability; Habitat loss

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Wetlands are under threat worldwide due to climate change and land-use conversion. The existence of habitat complexes with different hydroperiods is crucial for the regional biodiversity of temporary wetlands. Loss of short-hydroperiod wetlands has the most significant impact on invertebrate beta diversity, but loss of long-hydroperiod wetlands is also important. Both hydroperiod extremes should be considered in assessing potential biodiversity declines associated with wetland loss.
Wetlands are among the most threatened ecosystems worldwide due to climate change and land-use conversion. Regional biodiversity of temporary wetlands is dependent on the existence of habitat complexes with variable hydroperiods. Because temperature and rainfall regimes are predicted to shift globally, together with land-use patterns, different scenarios of wetland loss are expected in the future. To understand how wetland biodiversity might change in the future, it is important to evaluate how the loss of particular hydroperiods will affect overall diversity in a region. Using invertebrate datasets from five wetland complexes distributed across South and North America, we calculated beta diversity metrics for each region. Then we contrasted those metrics to simulations of sequential deletions of subsets (30%) of the long-, moderate- and short-hydroperiod wetlands to assess which wetland class would most affect invertebrate beta diversity in each region. Deletions of the shorthydroperiod wetlands led to the most significant decline in beta diversity. However, deletion effects of different wetland classes varied across study regions, with a negative correlation existing between deletions of the longand short-hydroperiod wetlands on invertebrate beta diversity. Our simulations indicate that loss of shorthydroperiod wetlands will have the most significant effects on invertebrate beta diversity, but loss of longhydroperiod wetlands will also be important. Thus, wetlands from both hydroperiod extremes should be considered when assessing potential biodiversity declines associated with habitat loss.

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