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Flooding and hydrologic connectivity modulate community assembly in a dynamic river-floodplain ecosystem

Braided river floodplains are highly dynamic ecosystems, where aquatic communities are strongly regulated by the hydrologic regime. So far, however, understanding of how flow variation influences assembly mechanisms remains limited. We collected benthic chironomids and oligochaetes over a year acros...

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Autores principales: Larsen, Stefano, Karaus, Ute, Claret, Cecile, Sporka, Ferdinand, Hamerlík, Ladislav, Tockner, Klement
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6461263/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30978198
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213227
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author Larsen, Stefano
Karaus, Ute
Claret, Cecile
Sporka, Ferdinand
Hamerlík, Ladislav
Tockner, Klement
author_facet Larsen, Stefano
Karaus, Ute
Claret, Cecile
Sporka, Ferdinand
Hamerlík, Ladislav
Tockner, Klement
author_sort Larsen, Stefano
collection PubMed
description Braided river floodplains are highly dynamic ecosystems, where aquatic communities are strongly regulated by the hydrologic regime. So far, however, understanding of how flow variation influences assembly mechanisms remains limited. We collected benthic chironomids and oligochaetes over a year across a lateral connectivity gradient in the semi-natural Tagliamento River (Italy). Four bankfull flood events occurred during the study, allowing the assessment of how flooding and hydrologic connectivity mediate the balance between stochastic and deterministic community assembly. While invertebrate density and richness were positively correlated with connectivity, diversity patterns showed no significant correlation. Species turnover through time increased with decreasing connectivity. Contrary to expectations, hydrologic connectivity did not influence the response of community metrics (e.g. diversity, density) to floods. Invertebrate composition was weakly related to connectivity, but changed predictably in response to floods. Multivariate ordinations showed that faunal composition diverged across the waterbodies during stable periods, reflecting differential species sorting across the lateral gradient, but converged again after floods. Stable hydrological periods allowed communities to assemble deterministically with prevalence of non-random beta-diversity and co-occurrence patterns and larger proportion of compositional variation explained by local abiotic features. These signals of deterministic processes declined after flooding events. This occurred despite no apparent evidence of flood-induced homogenisation of habitat conditions. This study is among the first to examine the annual dynamic of aquatic assemblages across a hydrologic connectivity gradient in a natural floodplain. Results highlight how biodiversity can exhibit complex relations with hydrologic connectivity. However, appraisal of the assembly mechanisms through time indicated that flooding shifted the balance from deterministic species sorting across floodplain habitats, towards stochastic processes related to organisms redistribution and the likely resetting of assembly to earlier stages.
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spelling pubmed-64612632019-05-03 Flooding and hydrologic connectivity modulate community assembly in a dynamic river-floodplain ecosystem Larsen, Stefano Karaus, Ute Claret, Cecile Sporka, Ferdinand Hamerlík, Ladislav Tockner, Klement PLoS One Research Article Braided river floodplains are highly dynamic ecosystems, where aquatic communities are strongly regulated by the hydrologic regime. So far, however, understanding of how flow variation influences assembly mechanisms remains limited. We collected benthic chironomids and oligochaetes over a year across a lateral connectivity gradient in the semi-natural Tagliamento River (Italy). Four bankfull flood events occurred during the study, allowing the assessment of how flooding and hydrologic connectivity mediate the balance between stochastic and deterministic community assembly. While invertebrate density and richness were positively correlated with connectivity, diversity patterns showed no significant correlation. Species turnover through time increased with decreasing connectivity. Contrary to expectations, hydrologic connectivity did not influence the response of community metrics (e.g. diversity, density) to floods. Invertebrate composition was weakly related to connectivity, but changed predictably in response to floods. Multivariate ordinations showed that faunal composition diverged across the waterbodies during stable periods, reflecting differential species sorting across the lateral gradient, but converged again after floods. Stable hydrological periods allowed communities to assemble deterministically with prevalence of non-random beta-diversity and co-occurrence patterns and larger proportion of compositional variation explained by local abiotic features. These signals of deterministic processes declined after flooding events. This occurred despite no apparent evidence of flood-induced homogenisation of habitat conditions. This study is among the first to examine the annual dynamic of aquatic assemblages across a hydrologic connectivity gradient in a natural floodplain. Results highlight how biodiversity can exhibit complex relations with hydrologic connectivity. However, appraisal of the assembly mechanisms through time indicated that flooding shifted the balance from deterministic species sorting across floodplain habitats, towards stochastic processes related to organisms redistribution and the likely resetting of assembly to earlier stages. Public Library of Science 2019-04-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6461263/ /pubmed/30978198 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213227 Text en © 2019 Larsen et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Larsen, Stefano
Karaus, Ute
Claret, Cecile
Sporka, Ferdinand
Hamerlík, Ladislav
Tockner, Klement
Flooding and hydrologic connectivity modulate community assembly in a dynamic river-floodplain ecosystem
title Flooding and hydrologic connectivity modulate community assembly in a dynamic river-floodplain ecosystem
title_full Flooding and hydrologic connectivity modulate community assembly in a dynamic river-floodplain ecosystem
title_fullStr Flooding and hydrologic connectivity modulate community assembly in a dynamic river-floodplain ecosystem
title_full_unstemmed Flooding and hydrologic connectivity modulate community assembly in a dynamic river-floodplain ecosystem
title_short Flooding and hydrologic connectivity modulate community assembly in a dynamic river-floodplain ecosystem
title_sort flooding and hydrologic connectivity modulate community assembly in a dynamic river-floodplain ecosystem
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6461263/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30978198
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213227
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