Literature DB >> 29665147

Detrimental effects of a novel flow regime on the functional trajectory of an aquatic invertebrate metacommunity.

Albert Ruhi1,2, Xiaoli Dong3, Courtney H McDaniel4, Darold P Batzer5, John L Sabo6.   

Abstract

Novel flow regimes resulting from dam operations and overallocation of freshwater resources are an emerging consequence of global change. Yet, anticipating how freshwater biodiversity will respond to surging flow regime alteration requires overcoming two challenges in environmental flow science: shifting from local to riverscape-level understanding of biodiversity dynamics, and from static to time-varying characterizations of the flow regime. Here, we used time-series methods (wavelets and multivariate autoregressive models) to quantify flow-regime alteration and to link time-varying flow regimes to the dynamics of multiple local communities potentially connected by dispersal (i.e., a metacommunity). We studied the Chattahoochee River below Buford dam (Georgia, U.S.A.), and asked how flow regime alteration by a large hydropower dam may control the long-term functional trajectory of the downstream invertebrate metacommunity. We found that seasonal variation in hydropeaking synchronized temporal fluctuations in trait abundance among the flow-altered sites. Three biological trait states describing adaptation to fast flows benefitted from flow management for hydropower, but did not compensate for declines in 16 "loser" traits. Accordingly, metacommunity-wide functional diversity responded negatively to hydropeaking intensity, and stochastic simulations showed that the risk of functional diversity collapse within the next 4 years would decrease by 17% if hydropeaking was ameliorated, or by 9% if it was applied every other season. Finally, an analysis of 97 reference and 23 dam-affected river sites across the U.S. Southeast suggested that flow variation at extraneous, human-relevant scales (12-hr, 24-hr, 1-week) is relatively common in rivers affected by hydropower dams. This study advances the notion that novel flow regimes are widespread, and simplify the functional structure of riverine communities by filtering out taxa with nonadaptive traits and by spatially synchronizing their dynamics. This is relevant in the light of ongoing and future hydrologic alteration due to climate non-stationarity and the new wave of dams planned globally.
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Biological traits; hydrologic alteration; invertebrates; time-series methods

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29665147     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14133

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  3 in total

1.  Extreme drought pushes stream invertebrate communities over functional thresholds.

Authors:  Thomas W H Aspin; Kieran Khamis; Thomas J Matthews; Alexander M Milner; Matthew J O'Callaghan; Mark Trimmer; Guy Woodward; Mark E Ledger
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2018-11-14       Impact factor: 10.863

2.  Disturbance legacies increase and synchronize nutrient concentrations and bacterial productivity in coastal ecosystems.

Authors:  John S Kominoski; Evelyn E Gaiser; Edward Castañeda-Moya; Stephen E Davis; Shimelis B Dessu; Paul Julian; Dong Yoon Lee; Luca Marazzi; Victor H Rivera-Monroy; Andres Sola; Ulrich Stingl; Sandro Stumpf; Donatto Surratt; Rafael Travieso; Tiffany G Troxler
Journal:  Ecology       Date:  2020-03-27       Impact factor: 5.499

3.  The geography of metapopulation synchrony in dendritic river networks.

Authors:  Stefano Larsen; Lise Comte; Ana Filipa Filipe; Marie-Josée Fortin; Claire Jacquet; Remo Ryser; Pablo A Tedesco; Ulrich Brose; Tibor Erős; Xingli Giam; Katie Irving; Albert Ruhi; Sapna Sharma; Julian D Olden
Journal:  Ecol Lett       Date:  2021-02-22       Impact factor: 9.492

  3 in total

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