Literature DB >> 32557028

Stable isotopes reveal effects of natural drivers and anthropogenic pressures on isotopic niches of invertebrate communities in a large subtropical river of China.

Sai Wang1,2, Lin-Hui Su1,2, Bang-Ke Luo1, Ying-Jun Qin1, Simon D Stewart3, Jin-Peng Tang1,2, Tuan-Tuan Wang4, Yang Yang5,6, Gong Cheng7.   

Abstract

Isotopic niches reflect the basic structure and functioning of river food webs; however, their response to riverine environments remains unclear. We used stable isotope analysis and community-wide metrics to quantify how invertebrate niches vary with environmental changes along a large subtropical river in China. Eight niche metrics, which had higher values in the wet than in the dry season, increased from headwaters to the middle river and decreased sharply near the estuarine industrial zones. The δ13C value of > - 23.8‰, which indicated consumption of epilithic diatoms, separated the invertebrates between the upper and mid-lower reaches. The δ15N values > 9.4‰ identified site-specific nitrogen sources from manure (e.g., animal effluent) and domestic sewage in agricultural area. The output of mixing models showed a downstream shift in carbon utilization by invertebrates from autochthonous periphyton and submerged hydrophytes to allochthonous C3 plants. Principle component (PC) and cluster analysis decomposed and grouped 40 environmental variables into 4 PCs that explained 84.5% of the total variance. Hierarchical partitioning revealed that the second and first PCs, which were driven mainly by biological indicators and habitat characteristics, had the highest explanatory power for niche ranges and areas (e.g., Bayesian ellipse), respectively. Our results suggest that reducing anthropogenic pressures (e.g., habitat loss and water pollution) on river ecosystems through measures, such as protecting diatom-dominated biofilms in riffles and controlling nitrogen loading in rural regions, may produce the greatest impact for river management. Graphical abstract.

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Keywords:  Biological indicator; East River; Functional feeding group; Layman metrics; MixSIAR; Nitrogen pollution; SIBER

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32557028     DOI: 10.1007/s11356-020-09252-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int        ISSN: 0944-1344            Impact factor:   4.223


  1 in total

1.  Longitudinal pattern of resource utilization by aquatic consumers along a disturbed subtropical urban river: Estimating the relative contribution of resources with stable isotope analysis.

Authors:  Sai Wang; Tuan-Tuan Wang; Wen-Tong Xia; Zhong-Bing Chen; Simon D Stewart; Feng-Juan Yang; Gong Cheng; Xiao-Di Wang; Ding-Ying Wang; Song-Guang Xie
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-11-11       Impact factor: 2.912

  1 in total

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