Beta diversity response to stress severity and heterogeneity in sensitive versus tolerant stream diatoms

Diversity and Distributions
By: , and 

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Abstract

Aim

Severity and heterogeneity of stress are major constraints of beta diversity, but their relative influence is poorly understood. Here, we addressed this question by examining the patterns of beta diversity in stress‐sensitive versus stress‐tolerant stream diatoms and their response to local versus regional factors along gradients of stress severity and heterogeneity.

Location

The Adirondack region of New York.

Methods

Beta diversity was measured as multivariate dispersion of communities across high stress, low stress, and high + low stress (heterogeneous) environments, encompassing 200 stream samples. Null models were implemented to assess community similarity relative to randomly assembled communities and the importance of local assembly processes versus the regional species pool.

Results

The overall beta diversity was influenced by a combination of severity and heterogeneity of stress, while beta diversity of sensitive species increased with heterogeneity. Beta diversity of tolerant species did not vary with either severity or heterogeneity of stress. Heterogeneity decreased community similarity relative to the null expectation in all groups of species. Stress reduced the importance of local assembly mechanisms for the overall beta diversity and sensitive species beta diversity. In contrast, the importance of local assembly mechanisms increased with stress regarding beta diversity of tolerant species.

Main conclusions

Beta diversity responded to both severity and heterogeneity of stress, but turnover along these gradients was mostly driven by sensitive species. The overall beta diversity and beta diversity of sensitive species became more constrained by the depauperate regional species pool, as opposed to local assembly mechanisms. While heterogeneous stress contributed to beta diversity, severe stress suppressed beta diversity through elimination of sensitive species. Therefore, an increase in beta diversity in an environmentally‐stressed region may serve as a forewarning for future loss of sensitive species, should the stress continue to intensify.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Beta diversity response to stress severity and heterogeneity in sensitive versus tolerant stream diatoms
Series title Diversity and Distributions
DOI 10.1111/ddi.12865
Volume 25
Issue 3
Year Published 2019
Language English
Publisher Wiley
Contributing office(s) New York Water Science Center
Description 11 p.
First page 374
Last page 384
Country United States
State New York
Other Geospatial Adirondack Park, Black River basin, Oswegatchie River basin
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