Literature DB >> 21939080

Global distribution of a key trophic guild contrasts with common latitudinal diversity patterns.

Luz Boyero1, Richard G Pearson, David Dudgeon, Manuel A S Graça, Mark O Gessner, Ricardo J Albariño, Verónica Ferreira, Catherine M Yule, Andrew J Boulton, Muthukumarasamy Arunachalam, Marcos Callisto, Eric Chauvet, Alonso Ramírez, Julián Chará, Marcelo S Moretti, José F Gonçalves, Julie E Helson, Ana M Chará-Serna, Andrea C Encalada, Judy N Davies, Sylvain Lamothe, Aydeè Cornejo, Aggie O Y Li, Leonardo M Buria, Verónica D Villanueva, María C Zúñiga, Catherine M Pringle.   

Abstract

Most hypotheses explaining the general gradient of higher diversity toward the equator are implicit or explicit about greater species packing in the tropics. However, global patterns of diversity within guilds, including trophic guilds (i.e., groups of organisms that use similar food resources), are poorly known. We explored global diversity patterns of a key trophic guild in stream ecosystems, the detritivore shredders. This was motivated by the fundamental ecological role of shredders as decomposers of leaf litter and by some records pointing to low shredder diversity and abundance in the tropics, which contrasts with diversity patterns of most major taxa for which broad-scale latitudinal patterns haven been examined. Given this evidence, we hypothesized that shredders are more abundant and diverse in temperate than in tropical streams, and that this pattern is related to the higher temperatures and lower availability of high-quality leaf litter in the tropics. Our comprehensive global survey (129 stream sites from 14 regions on six continents) corroborated the expected latitudinal pattern and showed that shredder distribution (abundance, diversity and assemblage composition) was explained by a combination of factors, including water temperature (some taxa were restricted to cool waters) and biogeography (some taxa were more diverse in particular biogeographic realms). In contrast to our hypothesis, shredder diversity was unrelated to leaf toughness, but it was inversely related to litter diversity. Our findings markedly contrast with global trends of diversity for most taxa, and with the general rule of higher consumer diversity at higher levels of resource diversity. Moreover, they highlight the emerging role of temperature in understanding global patterns of diversity, which is of great relevance in the face of projected global warming.

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21939080     DOI: 10.1890/10-2244.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  12 in total

1.  Biotic and abiotic variables influencing plant litter breakdown in streams: a global study.

Authors:  Luz Boyero; Richard G Pearson; Cang Hui; Mark O Gessner; Javier Pérez; Markos A Alexandrou; Manuel A S Graça; Bradley J Cardinale; Ricardo J Albariño; Muthukumarasamy Arunachalam; Leon A Barmuta; Andrew J Boulton; Andreas Bruder; Marcos Callisto; Eric Chauvet; Russell G Death; David Dudgeon; Andrea C Encalada; Verónica Ferreira; Ricardo Figueroa; Alexander S Flecker; José F Gonçalves; Julie Helson; Tomoya Iwata; Tajang Jinggut; Jude Mathooko; Catherine Mathuriau; Charles M'Erimba; Marcelo S Moretti; Catherine M Pringle; Alonso Ramírez; Lavenia Ratnarajah; José Rincon; Catherine M Yule
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2016-04-27       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Simulated drought regimes reveal community resilience and hydrological thresholds for altered decomposition.

Authors:  Héctor Rodríguez Pérez; Guillaume Borrel; Céline Leroy; Jean-François Carrias; Bruno Corbara; Diane S Srivastava; Régis Céréghino
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2018-03-24       Impact factor: 3.225

3.  Catchment scale deforestation increases the uniqueness of subtropical stream communities.

Authors:  Fabiana Schneck; Luis M Bini; Adriano S Melo; Danielle K Petsch; Victor S Saito; Simone Wengrat; Tadeu Siqueira
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2022-07-14       Impact factor: 3.298

4.  Do climate and soil influence phenotypic variability in leaf litter, microbial decomposition and shredder consumption?

Authors:  M A S Graça; J M Poquet
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2013-11-13       Impact factor: 3.225

5.  A comparative analysis reveals weak relationships between ecological factors and beta diversity of stream insect metacommunities at two spatial levels.

Authors:  Jani Heino; Adriano S Melo; Luis Mauricio Bini; Florian Altermatt; Salman A Al-Shami; David G Angeler; Núria Bonada; Cecilia Brand; Marcos Callisto; Karl Cottenie; Olivier Dangles; David Dudgeon; Andrea Encalada; Emma Göthe; Mira Grönroos; Neusa Hamada; Dean Jacobsen; Victor L Landeiro; Raphael Ligeiro; Renato T Martins; María Laura Miserendino; Che Salmah Md Rawi; Marciel E Rodrigues; Fabio de Oliveira Roque; Leonard Sandin; Denes Schmera; Luciano F Sgarbi; John P Simaika; Tadeu Siqueira; Ross M Thompson; Colin R Townsend
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2015-02-23       Impact factor: 2.912

6.  Drivers and Patterns of Ground-Dwelling Beetle Biodiversity across Northern Canada.

Authors:  Crystal M Ernst; Christopher M Buddle
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-04-22       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Latitudinal diversity gradients in Mesozoic non-marine turtles.

Authors:  David B Nicholson; Patricia A Holroyd; Paul Valdes; Paul M Barrett
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2016-11-23       Impact factor: 2.963

8.  Resource-allocation tradeoffs in caddisflies facing multiple stressors.

Authors:  Francisco Correa-Araneda; Ana Basaguren; Roberto T Abdala-Díaz; Alan Mosele Tonin; Luz Boyero
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2017-06-02       Impact factor: 2.912

9.  Riparian plant litter quality increases with latitude.

Authors:  Luz Boyero; Manuel A S Graça; Alan M Tonin; Javier Pérez; Andrew J Swafford; Verónica Ferreira; Andrea Landeira-Dabarca; Markos A Alexandrou; Mark O Gessner; Brendan G McKie; Ricardo J Albariño; Leon A Barmuta; Marcos Callisto; Julián Chará; Eric Chauvet; Checo Colón-Gaud; David Dudgeon; Andrea C Encalada; Ricardo Figueroa; Alexander S Flecker; Tadeusz Fleituch; André Frainer; José F Gonçalves; Julie E Helson; Tomoya Iwata; Jude Mathooko; Charles M'Erimba; Catherine M Pringle; Alonso Ramírez; Christopher M Swan; Catherine M Yule; Richard G Pearson
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-09-05       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  Impacts of detritivore diversity loss on instream decomposition are greatest in the tropics.

Authors:  Luz Boyero; Naiara López-Rojo; Alan M Tonin; Javier Pérez; Francisco Correa-Araneda; Richard G Pearson; Jaime Bosch; Ricardo J Albariño; Sankarappan Anbalagan; Leon A Barmuta; Ana Basaguren; Francis J Burdon; Adriano Caliman; Marcos Callisto; Adolfo R Calor; Ian C Campbell; Bradley J Cardinale; J Jesús Casas; Ana M Chará-Serna; Eric Chauvet; Szymon Ciapała; Checo Colón-Gaud; Aydeé Cornejo; Aaron M Davis; Monika Degebrodt; Emerson S Dias; María E Díaz; Michael M Douglas; Andrea C Encalada; Ricardo Figueroa; Alexander S Flecker; Tadeusz Fleituch; Erica A García; Gabriela García; Pavel E García; Mark O Gessner; Jesús E Gómez; Sergio Gómez; Jose F Gonçalves; Manuel A S Graça; Daniel C Gwinn; Robert O Hall; Neusa Hamada; Cang Hui; Daichi Imazawa; Tomoya Iwata; Samuel K Kariuki; Andrea Landeira-Dabarca; Kelsey Laymon; María Leal; Richard Marchant; Renato T Martins; Frank O Masese; Megan Maul; Brendan G McKie; Adriana O Medeiros; Charles M M' Erimba; Jen A Middleton; Silvia Monroy; Timo Muotka; Junjiro N Negishi; Alonso Ramírez; John S Richardson; José Rincón; Juan Rubio-Ríos; Gisele M Dos Santos; Romain Sarremejane; Fran Sheldon; Augustine Sitati; Nathalie S D Tenkiano; Scott D Tiegs; Janine R Tolod; Michael Venarsky; Anne Watson; Catherine M Yule
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-06-17       Impact factor: 14.919

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