Literature DB >> 34032337

Drought effects on invertebrate metapopulation dynamics and quasi-extinction risk in an intermittent river network.

Romain Sarremejane1,2, Rachel Stubbington3, Judy England4, Catherine E M Sefton5, Michael Eastman5, Simon Parry5, Albert Ruhi1.   

Abstract

Ecological communities can remain stable in the face of disturbance if their constituent species have different resistance and resilience strategies. In turn, local stability scales up regionally if heterogeneous landscapes maintain spatial asynchrony across discrete populations-but not if large-scale stressors synchronize environmental conditions and biological responses. Here, we hypothesized that droughts could drastically decrease the stability of invertebrate metapopulations both by filtering out poorly adapted species locally, and by synchronizing their dynamics across a river network. We tested this hypothesis via multivariate autoregressive state-space (MARSS) models on spatially replicated, long-term data describing aquatic invertebrate communities and hydrological conditions in a set of temperate, lowland streams subject to seasonal and supraseasonal drying events. This quantitative approach allowed us to assess the influence of local (flow magnitude) and network-scale (hydrological connectivity) drivers on invertebrate long-term trajectories, and to simulate near-future responses to a range of drought scenarios. We found that fluctuations in species abundances were heterogeneous across communities and driven by a combination of hydrological and stochastic drivers. Among metapopulations, increasing extent of dry reaches reduced the abundance of functional groups with low resistance or resilience capacities (i.e. low ability to persist in situ or recolonize from elsewhere, respectively). Our simulations revealed that metapopulation quasi-extinction risk for taxa vulnerable to drought increased exponentially as flowing habitats contracted within the river network, whereas the risk for taxa with resistance and resilience traits remained stable. Our results suggest that drought can be a synchronizing agent in riverscapes, potentially leading to regional quasi-extinction of species with lower resistance and resilience abilities. Better recognition of drought-driven synchronization may increase realism in species extinction forecasts as hydroclimatic extremes continue to intensify worldwide.
© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Keywords:  Moran effect; drought; ecological resilience; flow intermittence; functional traits; spatial synchrony; time-series modelling

Year:  2021        PMID: 34032337     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15720

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


  2 in total

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Authors:  J Ryan Bellmore; Jason B Fellman; Eran Hood; Matthew R Dunkle; Richard T Edwards
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2022-06-09       Impact factor: 13.211

2.  Four decades of climatic fluctuations and fish recruitment stability across a marine-freshwater gradient.

Authors:  Denise D Colombano; Stephanie M Carlson; James A Hobbs; Albert Ruhi
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2022-06-16       Impact factor: 13.211

  2 in total

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