Plankton metacommunities in floodplain wetlands under contrasting hydrological conditions

Species diversity is affected by processes operating at multiple spatial scales, although the most relevant scales that contribute to compositional variation and the temporal shifts of the involved mechanisms remain poorly explored. We studied spatial patterns of phytoplankton, rotifers and microcru...

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Autores principales: Chaparro, G., Horváth, Z., O'Farrell, I., Ptacnik, R., Hein, T.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00465070_v63_n4_p380_Chaparro
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spelling todo:paper_00465070_v63_n4_p380_Chaparro2023-10-03T14:52:16Z Plankton metacommunities in floodplain wetlands under contrasting hydrological conditions Chaparro, G. Horváth, Z. O'Farrell, I. Ptacnik, R. Hein, T. beta-diversity environmental heterogeneity phytoplankton spatial scale zooplankton Species diversity is affected by processes operating at multiple spatial scales, although the most relevant scales that contribute to compositional variation and the temporal shifts of the involved mechanisms remain poorly explored. We studied spatial patterns of phytoplankton, rotifers and microcrustacean diversity across scales in a river floodplain system of the Danube in Austria under contrasting hydrological conditions (post-flood versus low water level). The species turnover between water sections (β2) and between wetlands (β3) was the major components of regional diversity for all studied groups, with species turnover between habitats (β1) as a minor contributor. β1 diversity and β2 diversity were lower than expected by chance in most cases, suggesting that communities are more homogeneous than expected at these scales. β3 diversity was higher than expected by chance in many cases, indicating more distinct communities at the wetland level. Patterns were highly similar under different hydrological conditions, indicating no major immediate effect of flood events. Local environmental and spatial factors were similarly important in structuring phytoplankton, rotifer and microcrustacean communities in both hydrological conditions. Relevant environmental factors were spatially structured in post-flood conditions especially between sections, suggesting flood-driven homogenisation within the wetlands. Under low water level, spatial structuring of environment decreased and pure environmental factors gained relevance for phytoplankton and rotifers. Our results suggest that although β2 diversity between water sections is a major component of regional diversity, long-term spatial processes responding to connectivity across the wetland structure phytoplankton, rotifer and microcrustacean communities. Aquatic sections within the limited spatial extent of the remaining floodplain areas appear more homogeneous than expected probably due to flood recurrence over the years. These results highlight that adequate planning of restoration and conservation strategies of floodplain wetlands should consider environmental heterogeneity together with long-term spatial processes. © 2018 The Authors. Freshwater Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00465070_v63_n4_p380_Chaparro
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic beta-diversity
environmental heterogeneity
phytoplankton
spatial scale
zooplankton
spellingShingle beta-diversity
environmental heterogeneity
phytoplankton
spatial scale
zooplankton
Chaparro, G.
Horváth, Z.
O'Farrell, I.
Ptacnik, R.
Hein, T.
Plankton metacommunities in floodplain wetlands under contrasting hydrological conditions
topic_facet beta-diversity
environmental heterogeneity
phytoplankton
spatial scale
zooplankton
description Species diversity is affected by processes operating at multiple spatial scales, although the most relevant scales that contribute to compositional variation and the temporal shifts of the involved mechanisms remain poorly explored. We studied spatial patterns of phytoplankton, rotifers and microcrustacean diversity across scales in a river floodplain system of the Danube in Austria under contrasting hydrological conditions (post-flood versus low water level). The species turnover between water sections (β2) and between wetlands (β3) was the major components of regional diversity for all studied groups, with species turnover between habitats (β1) as a minor contributor. β1 diversity and β2 diversity were lower than expected by chance in most cases, suggesting that communities are more homogeneous than expected at these scales. β3 diversity was higher than expected by chance in many cases, indicating more distinct communities at the wetland level. Patterns were highly similar under different hydrological conditions, indicating no major immediate effect of flood events. Local environmental and spatial factors were similarly important in structuring phytoplankton, rotifer and microcrustacean communities in both hydrological conditions. Relevant environmental factors were spatially structured in post-flood conditions especially between sections, suggesting flood-driven homogenisation within the wetlands. Under low water level, spatial structuring of environment decreased and pure environmental factors gained relevance for phytoplankton and rotifers. Our results suggest that although β2 diversity between water sections is a major component of regional diversity, long-term spatial processes responding to connectivity across the wetland structure phytoplankton, rotifer and microcrustacean communities. Aquatic sections within the limited spatial extent of the remaining floodplain areas appear more homogeneous than expected probably due to flood recurrence over the years. These results highlight that adequate planning of restoration and conservation strategies of floodplain wetlands should consider environmental heterogeneity together with long-term spatial processes. © 2018 The Authors. Freshwater Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
format JOUR
author Chaparro, G.
Horváth, Z.
O'Farrell, I.
Ptacnik, R.
Hein, T.
author_facet Chaparro, G.
Horváth, Z.
O'Farrell, I.
Ptacnik, R.
Hein, T.
author_sort Chaparro, G.
title Plankton metacommunities in floodplain wetlands under contrasting hydrological conditions
title_short Plankton metacommunities in floodplain wetlands under contrasting hydrological conditions
title_full Plankton metacommunities in floodplain wetlands under contrasting hydrological conditions
title_fullStr Plankton metacommunities in floodplain wetlands under contrasting hydrological conditions
title_full_unstemmed Plankton metacommunities in floodplain wetlands under contrasting hydrological conditions
title_sort plankton metacommunities in floodplain wetlands under contrasting hydrological conditions
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00465070_v63_n4_p380_Chaparro
work_keys_str_mv AT chaparrog planktonmetacommunitiesinfloodplainwetlandsundercontrastinghydrologicalconditions
AT horvathz planktonmetacommunitiesinfloodplainwetlandsundercontrastinghydrologicalconditions
AT ofarrelli planktonmetacommunitiesinfloodplainwetlandsundercontrastinghydrologicalconditions
AT ptacnikr planktonmetacommunitiesinfloodplainwetlandsundercontrastinghydrologicalconditions
AT heint planktonmetacommunitiesinfloodplainwetlandsundercontrastinghydrologicalconditions
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