4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Drivers of phytoplankton diversity in Patagonian and Antarctic lakes across a latitudinal gradient (2150 km): the importance of spatial and environmental factors

Journal

HYDROBIOLOGIA
Volume 764, Issue 1, Pages 157-170

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-015-2269-2

Keywords

Phytoplankton; Lakes; Latitudinal gradient; Trophic gradient; Diversity; Biogeography

Funding

  1. Argentinean Funds for Scientific and Technical Investigations of Argentina [FONCYT PICT 32732]
  2. CONICET of the National Council of Scientific and Technical Research of Argentina [PIP 418]
  3. University of Buenos Aires [UBACYT 01/Y018]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We investigated the phytoplankton structure in 60 lakes across a latitudinal gradient (2150 km), from Austral Patagonia to Antarctica, including environments ranging from oligotrophic to eutrophic. We analysed the latitudinal variation of species richness (local and regional) and evenness, as well as the similarity decay in phytoplankton composition in Patagonia and Antarctica. The following hypotheses were tested: (1) there is a decline of phytoplankton species richness with increasing latitude; (2) phytoplankton structure is influenced by both geographical and environmental factors. (3) The predominant algal trophic strategy (autotrophic vs mixotrophic) is influenced by lake trophic status. Phytoplankton was analysed using a polyphasic approach (morphologically based species diversity, functional diversity, dominant molecular diversity). We found a significant decline in phytoplankton richness with increasing latitude. Multivariate analyses showed that phytoplankton is structured by the lake geographic position (mainly latitude) and variables related with trophic state (nutrients, conductivity and pH). The autotrophs/mixotrophs ratio increased towards higher trophic states. The initial similarity was higher in Antarctica than in Patagonia, whereas the halving distance was lower for Antarctic lakes. The three biodiversity approaches of this meta-analysis evidenced that both geographic and environmental factors influence phytoplankton diversity at large spatial scale, although the local effect was stronger.

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