4.6 Article

Temperature and spatial connectivity drive patterns in freshwater macroinvertebrate diversity across the Arctic

期刊

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
卷 67, 期 1, 页码 159-175

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/fwb.13805

关键词

benthic invertebrates; dispersal; diversity; high latitude; lake; river

资金

  1. Newfoundland and Labrador Water Resources Management Division
  2. Ontario Ministry of the Environment (MOE) Cooperative Freshwater Ecology Unit
  3. Parks Canada Nahanni National Park Reserve
  4. Parks Canada Western Arctic Field Unit
  5. Environment and Climate Change Canada
  6. European Union Environment and Climate Programme
  7. Northwest Territories Cumulative Impact Monitoring Program
  8. International Polar Year
  9. Polar Continental Shelf Project
  10. The Icelandic Centre for Research
  11. The DANCEA programme (Denmark)
  12. Natural Environment Research Council studentship [NE/L501712/1]
  13. European Union Seventh Framework Programme [FP7/2007-2013, 262693]
  14. Norwegian Environment Agency
  15. Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation
  16. State Task of the Animals Ecology Department of the Institute of Biology, Komi SC UrD RAS [0414-2018-0005 (AAAA-A17-117112850235-2)]
  17. NERC [NE/L501712/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that freshwater biodiversity in the Arctic decreases with increasing latitude, particularly more pronounced in mainland regions. There are significant dissimilarities between different regions, mainly due to connectivity limitations. Community composition is primarily influenced by temperature, while geology and precipitation are also important factors.
Warming in the Arctic is predicted to change freshwater biodiversity through loss of unique taxa and northward range expansion of lower latitude taxa. Detecting such changes requires establishing circumpolar baselines for diversity, and understanding the primary drivers of diversity. We examined benthic macroinvertebrate diversity using a circumpolar dataset of >1,500 Arctic lake and river sites. Rarefied alpha diversity within catchments was assessed along latitude and temperature gradients. Community composition was assessed through region-scale analysis of beta diversity and its components (nestedness and turnover), and analysis of biotic-abiotic relationships. Rarefied alpha diversity of lakes and rivers declined with increasing latitude, although more strongly across mainland regions than islands. Diversity was strongly related to air temperature, with the lowest diversity in the coldest catchments. Regional dissimilarity was highest when mainland regions were compared with islands, suggesting that connectivity limitations led to the strongest dissimilarity. High contributions of nestedness indicated that island regions contained a subset of the taxa found in mainland regions. High Arctic rivers and lakes were predominately occupied by Chironomidae and Oligochaeta, whereas Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera taxa were more abundant at lower latitudes. Community composition was strongly associated with temperature, although geology and precipitation were also important correlates. The strong association with temperature supports the prediction that warming will increase Arctic macroinvertebrate diversity, although low diversity on islands suggests that this increase will be limited by biogeographical constraints. Long-term harmonised monitoring across the circumpolar region is necessary to detect such changes to diversity and inform science-based management.

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