| Literature DB >> 31344301 |
Rong Wang1, John A Dearing2, C Patrick Doncaster3, Xiangdong Yang1, Enlou Zhang1, Peter G Langdon2, Hui Yang4, Xuhui Dong5, Zhujun Hu6, Min Xu6, Yanjie Zhao2, Ji Shen1.
Abstract
Lake biodiversity is an incomplete indicator of exogenous forcing insofar as it ignores underlying deformations of community structure. Here, we seek a proxy for deformation in a network of diatom assemblages comprising 452 species in 273 lakes across China. We test predictions from network theory that nodes of similar type will tend to self-organize in an unstressed system to a positively skewed frequency distribution of nodal degree. The empirical data reveal shifts in the frequency distributions of species associations across regions, from positive skew in lakes in west China with a history of low human impacts, to predominantly negative skew amongst lakes in highly disturbed regions in east China. Skew values relate strongly to nutrient loading from agricultural activity and urbanization, as measured by total phosphorus in lake water. Reconstructions through time show that positive skew reduces with temporal intensification of human impacts in the lake and surrounding catchments, and rises as lakes recover from disturbance. Our study illustrates how network parameters can track the loss of aquatic assemblage structure in lakes associated with human pressures.Entities:
Keywords: biodiversity; diatom assemblages; ecological resilience; network skewness; self-organized system; stability
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31344301 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863