Maria Dayanne Lima de Lucena, André Ribeiro-Martins, Lilian Casatti, Thiago Bernardi Vieira, Gabriel Lourenço Brejão, Fernando Rogério Carvalho, Thaisa Sala Michelan, Leandro Juen, Luciano Fogaça de Assis de Montag
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The increasing environmental changes threatening the fish fauna of streams are driving a growing interest in understanding how sites and species contribute to diversity, as this is important information for decision-making related to the management and conservation of priority areas and species. The objective of this study was to understand how environmental factors, spatial distance between streams, land use, and land cover (landscape) may be associated with the uniqueness of fish assemblages in Amazonian streams.
We sampled fish assemblages and characterised environmental conditions in 29 streams within and around the Tapajós River basin, near the Amazon National Park in Brazil. Each stream was studied along a 150-m stretch.
The variables associated with the local contribution to beta diversity (LCBD) were vegetation cover and the presence of refuges. Streams inside and outside the park showed similar contributions to beta diversity. Species richness and abundance showed a negative relationship with LCBD, suggesting that unique sites tended to have few species and low abundance. The species that contributed most to beta diversity (SCBD) had intermediate occurrence, high abundance, and non-marginal niches. We did not observe an effect of niche breadth on SCBD, as both generalist and specialist species contributed equally to beta diversity.
Our findings underscore the role of environmental variables in ecological uniqueness. Sites unique in species composition may also exhibit low species richness and abundance.
Our study demonstrates the importance of environmental variables in conserving biodiversity in Amazonian streams in the face of environmental changes. By examining the contributions of sites and species, we highlight the importance of considering habitat quality and uniqueness in protecting these ecosystems against the challenges of global change.
期刊介绍:
Freshwater Biology publishes papers on all aspects of the ecology of inland waters, including rivers and lakes, ground waters, flood plains and other freshwater wetlands. We include studies of micro-organisms, algae, macrophytes, invertebrates, fish and other vertebrates, as well as those concerning whole systems and related physical and chemical aspects of the environment, provided that they have clear biological relevance.
Studies may focus at any level in the ecological hierarchy from physiological ecology and animal behaviour, through population dynamics and evolutionary genetics, to community interactions, biogeography and ecosystem functioning. They may also be at any scale: from microhabitat to landscape, and continental to global. Preference is given to research, whether meta-analytical, experimental, theoretical or descriptive, highlighting causal (ecological) mechanisms from which clearly stated hypotheses are derived. Manuscripts with an experimental or conceptual flavour are particularly welcome, as are those or which integrate laboratory and field work, and studies from less well researched areas of the world. Priority is given to submissions that are likely to interest a wide range of readers.
We encourage submission of papers well grounded in ecological theory that deal with issues related to the conservation and management of inland waters. Papers interpreting fundamental research in a way that makes clear its applied, strategic or socio-economic relevance are also welcome.
Review articles (FRESHWATER BIOLOGY REVIEWS) and discussion papers (OPINION) are also invited: these enable authors to publish high-quality material outside the constraints of standard research papers.