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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/28956
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Title: | Environmental filtering and limiting similarity as main forces driving diatom community structure in Mediterranean and continental temporary and perennial streams |
Authors: | Várbíró, Gábor Borics, Gábor Novais, Maria Helena Morais, Maria Manuela Rimet, Frédéric Bouchez, Agnès Tapolczai, Kálmán Bácsi, István Usseglio-Polatera, Philippe B-Béres, Viktória |
Editors: | Sabater, Sergi |
Keywords: | Temporary streams Mediterranean and continental regions Diatoms Limiting similarity Environmental filtering |
Issue Date: | 23-Jun-2020 |
Publisher: | Elsevier |
Citation: | Várbíró G., Borics G., Novais M.H., Morais M.M., Rimet F., Bouchez A., Tapolczai K., Bácsi I., Usseglio-Polatera P. & V. B-Béres (2020). Environmental filtering and limiting similarity as main forces driving diatom community structure in Mediterranean and continental temporary and perennial streams. Science of the Total Environment 741: 140459 |
Abstract: | Climatic extreme events such as droughts (unpredictable), dry periods (predictable) or even flush floods,
threaten freshwater ecosystemsworldwide. The filtering mechanisms of these events and their strength on communities,
however, can be different among regions. While time-for-adaptation theory defines whether or not
water scarcity can be considered as disturbance, the stress-dominance theory predicts an increase in importance
of environmental filtering and a decrease in the role of biotic interactions in communities with increasing environmental
stress. Here, we testedwhether environmental filtering (leading to trait convergence) or limiting similarity
(leading to trait divergence) is the main assembly rule shaping the structure and trait composition of
benthic diatom assemblages in Mediterranean (Portuguese) and continental (Hungarian) temporary and perennial streams.We assumed that the trait composition of diatomassemblages in the two stream typeswould
be less different in the Mediterranean than in the continental region (addressed to time-for-adaptation theory).
We also hypothesized that trait composition would be shaped by environmental filtering in the Hungarian
streams while by biotic interactions in Portuguese streams (addressed to stress-dominance theory). Our results
supported our first hypothesis since traits, which associated primarily to temporary streams were found only in
the continental region. Our findings, however, only partially proved the stress-dominance hypothesis. In the continental
region,where drying up of streamswere induced by unpredictable droughts, biotic interactionswere the
main assembly rules shaping community structure. In contrast, environmental filtering was nearly as important
as limiting similarity in structuring trait composition in the Mediterranean region during the predictable dry
phasewith no superficial flow. These analyses also highlighted that drought events (both predictable and unpredictable
ones) have a complex and strong influence on benthic diatom assemblages resulting even in irreversible
changes in trait composition and thereby in ecosystem functioning. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/28956 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | ICT - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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