4.6 Article

Scale-dependent longitudinal patterns in mussel communities

期刊

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
卷 57, 期 11, 页码 2272-2284

出版社

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/fwb.12001

关键词

Bray-Curtis ordination; channel slope; community composition; GIS; unionid

资金

  1. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  2. National Science Foundation [DEB-9306687]
  3. Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation [E-59]
  4. United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
  5. University of Oklahoma

向作者/读者索取更多资源

1. Species richness and assemblage patterns of organisms are dictated by numerous factors, probably operating at multiple scales. Freshwater mussels (Unionidae) are an endangered, speciose faunal group, making them an interesting model system to study the influence of landscape features on organisms. In addition, landscape features that influence species distributions and the scale at which the factors have the greatest impact are important issues that need to be answered to conserve freshwater mussels. 2. In this study, we quantified freshwater mussel communities at 16 sites along three mid-sized rivers in the south-central United States. We addressed the following questions: (i) Are there predictable longitudinal changes in mussel community composition? (ii) What landscape variables best explain shifts in community composition? and (iii) At what scale do landscape variables best predict mussel community composition? 3. After controlling for the influence of longitudinal position along the stream, we compared mussel distributions to a suite of hypothesised explanatory landscape variables across multiple scales catchment scale (entire drainage area), buffer scale (100-m riparian buffer of the entire catchment) and reach scale (100-m riparian buffer extending 1 km upstream from the sampling site). 4. We found a significant and consistent longitudinal shift in dominant mussel species across all three rivers, with community composition strongly related to distance from the headwaters, which is highly correlated with stream size. After accounting for stream size, variables at the buffer scale were the best predictors of mussel community composition. After accounting for catchment position, mean channel slope was the best explanatory variable of community composition and appeared in all top candidate models at the catchment and buffer scales. Coverage of wetland and urban area were also correlated with community composition at the catchment and buffer scales. 5. Our results suggest that landscape-scale habitat factors influence mussel community composition. Landscape features at the buffer scale performed best at determining community composition after accounting for position in the catchment; thus, further protection of riparian buffers will help to conserve mussel communities.

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