Subtropical streams harbour higher genus richness and lower abundance of insects compared to boreal streams, but scale matters

Nenhuma Miniatura disponível

Data

2018-09-01

Autores

Heino, Jani
Melo, Adriano S.
Jyrkänkallio-Mikkola, Jenny
Petsch, Danielle Katharine
Saito, Victor Satoru
Tolonen, Kimmo T.
Bini, Luis Mauricio
Landeiro, Victor Lemes
Silva, Thiago Sanna Freire [UNESP]
Pajunen, Virpi

Título da Revista

ISSN da Revista

Título de Volume

Editor

Resumo

Aim: Biological diversity typically varies between climatically different regions, and regions closer to the equator often support higher numbers of taxa than those closer to the poles. However, these trends have been assessed for a few organism groups, and the existing studies have rarely been based on extensive identical surveys in different climatic regions. Location: We conducted standardized surveys of wadeable streams in a boreal (western Finland) and a subtropical (south-eastern Brazil) region, sampling insects identically from 100 streams in each region and measuring the same environmental variables in both regions. Taxon: Aquatic insects. Methods: Comparisons were made at the scales of local stream sites, drainage basins and entire regions. We standardized the spatial extent of the study areas by resampling regional richness based on subsets of sites with similar extents. We examined differences in genus richness and assemblage abundance patterns between the regions using graphical and statistical modelling approaches. Results: We found that while genus accumulation and rank-abundance curves were relatively similar at the regional scale between Finland and Brazil, regional genus richness was higher in the latter but regional abundance much higher in the former region. These regional patterns for richness and abundance were reproduced by basin and local genus richness that were higher in Brazil than in Finland, and assemblage abundance that was much higher in Finland than in Brazil. The magnitude of the difference in genus richness between Brazil and Finland tended to increase from local through basin to regional scales. Main conclusions: Our findings suggest that factors related to evolutionary diversification might explain differences in genus richness between these two climatically different regions, whereas higher nutrient concentrations of stream waters might explain the higher abundance of insects in Finland than in Brazil.

Descrição

Palavras-chave

alpha diversity, latitudinal diversity gradient, low–high latitude comparison, nutrients, rank abundance, regional diversity, stream insects

Como citar

Journal of Biogeography, v. 45, n. 9, p. 1983-1993, 2018.

Coleções