4.7 Article

Global patterns of stream detritivore distribution: implications for biodiversity loss in changing climates

Journal

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 21, Issue 2, Pages 134-141

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-8238.2011.00673.x

Keywords

Detritus; diversity; guild; latitudinal gradient; leaf litter; shredders; species richness; stream ecosystems; trophic diversity

Funding

  1. National Geographic Society's Committee for Research and Exploration [7980-06]

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Aim We tested the hypothesis that shredder detritivores, a key trophic guild in stream ecosystems, are more diverse at higher latitudes, which has important ecological implications in the face of potential biodiversity losses that are expected as a result of climate change. We also explored the dependence of local shredder diversity on the regional species pool across latitudes, and examined the influence of environmental factors on shredder diversity. Location World-wide (156 sites from 17 regions located in all inhabited continents at latitudes ranging from 67 degrees N to 41 S). Methods We used linear regression to examine the latitudinal variation in shredder diversity at different spatial scales: alpha (alpha), gamma (gamma) and beta (beta) diversity. We also explored the effect of gamma-diversity on alpha-diversity across latitudes with regression analysis, and the possible influence of local environmental factors on shredder diversity with simple correlations. Results Alpha diversity increased with latitude, while gamma- and beta-diversity showed no clear latitudinal pattern. Temperate sites showed a linear relationship between gamma- and alpha-diversity; in contrast, tropical sites showed evidence of local species saturation, whichmay explain why the latitudinal gradient in alpha-diversity is not accompanied by a gradient in gamma-diversity. Alpha diversity was related to several local habitat characteristics, but gamma- and beta-diversity were not related to any of the environmental factors measured. Main conclusions Our results indicate that global patterns of shredder diversity are complex and depend on spatial scale. However, we can draw several conclusions that have important ecological implications. Alpha diversity is limited at tropical sites by local factors, implying a higher risk of loss of key species or the whole shredder guild (the latter implying the loss of trophic diversity). Even if regional species pools are not particularly species poor in the tropics, colonization from adjacent sites may be limited. Moreover, many shredder species belong to cool-adapted taxa that may be close to their thermal maxima in the tropics, which makes them more vulnerable to climate warming. Our results suggest that tropical streams require specific scientific attention and conservation efforts to prevent loss of shredder biodiversity and serious alteration of ecosystem processes.

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