30 research outputs found

    Streambed migration frequency drives ecology and biogeochemistry across spatial scales

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    The bed of fluvial ecosystems plays a major role in global biogeochemical cycles. All fluvial sediments migrate and although responses of aquatic organisms to such movements have been recorded there is no theoretical framework on how the frequency of sediment movement affects streambed ecology and biogeochemistry. We here developed a theoretical framework describing how the moving-resting frequencies of fine-grained sediments constrain streambed communities across spatial scales. Specifically, we suggest that the most drastic impact on benthic and hyporheic communities will exist when ecological and biogeochemical processes are at the same temporal scale as the sediment moving-resting frequency. Moreover, we propose that the simultaneous occurrence of streambed patches differing in morphodynamics should be considered as an important driver of metacommunity dynamics. We surmise that the frequency of patch transition will add new dimensions to the understanding of biogeochemical cycling and metacommunities from micro-habitat to segment scales. This theoretical framework is important for fluvial ecosystems with frequent sediment movement, yet it could be applied to any other dynamic habitat.German Research Foundation joint funding grant RI 2093/2-1 and MU 1464/7-1Carl Zeiss Foundation, P2021-00-004Israel Science Foundation, grant 682/17),NSF-BSF joint funding grant EAR-1734300UK-Israel Science Fellowship Scheme 2018–2019Israeli Science Foundation, grant 944\2

    Depth and vertical hydrodynamics constrain the size structure of a lowland streambed community

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    Abundance-body mass (N–M) relationships are prominent macroecological patterns and provide an integrated measurement of the structure and energy flow through natural communities. However, little is known about how N-M relationships are constrained by local environmental conditions. Here we quantify how sediment depth and direction of surface–groundwater exchange (vertical hydrodynamics), two major drivers of the streambed ecology, determine N-M scaling in a sandy lowland, European stream. Streambed assemblages included flagellates, ciliates, meiofauna and macroinvertebrates, and spanned five orders of magnitude in body mass. We detected a significant interaction of body mass with depth and vertical hydrodynamics with a sharp reduction in N–M slopes in the hyporheic zone and under upwelling conditions. These results revealed that streambed assemblages become more size–structured as environmental constraints increase with direct implications for the metabolic capacity and functioning of the system

    Long-term forecast of thermal mortality with climate warming in riverine amphipods

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    Forecasting long-term consequences of global warming requires knowledge on thermal mortality and how heat stress interacts with other environmental stressors on different timescales. Here, we describe a flexible analytical framework to forecast mortality risks by combining laboratory measurements on tolerance and field temperature records. Our framework incorporates physiological acclimation effects, temporal scale differences and the ecological reality of fluctuations in temperature, and other factors such as oxygen. As a proof of concept, we investigated the heat tolerance of amphipods Dikerogammarus villosus and Echinogammarus trichiatus in the river Waal, the Netherlands. These organisms were acclimated to different temperatures and oxygen levels. By integrating experimental data with high-resolution field data, we derived the daily heat mortality probabilities for each species under different oxygen levels, considering current temperatures as well as 1 and 2°C warming scenarios. By expressing heat stress as a mortality probability rather than a upper critical temperature, these can be used to calculate cumulative annual mortality, allowing the scaling up from individuals to populations. Our findings indicate a substantial increase in annual mortality over the coming decades, driven by projected increases in summer temperatures. Thermal acclimation and adequate oxygenation improved heat tolerance and their effects were magnified on longer timescales. Consequently, acclimation effects appear to be more effective than previously recognized and crucial for persistence under current temperatures. However, even in the best-case scenario, mortality of D. villosus is expected to approach 100% by 2100, while E. trichiatus appears to be less vulnerable with mortality increasing to 60%. Similarly, mortality risks vary spatially: In southern, warmer rivers, riverine animals will need to shift from the main channel toward the cooler head waters to avoid thermal mortality. Overall, this framework generates high-resolution forecasts on how rising temperatures, in combination with other environmental stressors such as hypoxia, impact ecological communities.ANID PIA/BASAL FB0002Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico, Grant/Award Number: 1211113Ministerio de Ciencia e Inovación, Grant/Award Number: Juan de la Cierva-formación FellowshipNederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek, Grant/ Award Number: 016.161.32

    Environmental filtering and community delineation in the streambed ecotone

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    Abstract A current controversy in ecology is whether biological communities are discrete biological entities or simply study units created for convenience; a debate that becomes even more heated when delimiting communities along ecotones. Here, we report an interdisciplinary study designed to address the interplay between environmental drivers and community ecology in a typical ecotone ecosystem: the streambed. Environmental filtering at a micro-scale determined how diversity, productivity and composition of the whole streambed assemblage varied with depth and with the direction of vertical water exchange. Biomass and production decreased with increasing depth, and were lower under upwelling than downwelling conditions. However, the rate at which biomass and production decreased with increasing depth differed significantly for different taxonomic groups. Using quantitative biocenosis analysis, we also showed that benthic and hyporheic zone assemblages (assemblages in close juxtaposition) could be clearly distinguished as discrete communities with individual integrity. Vertical hydrodynamic conditions also influenced the demarcation between both communities; the benthic community reached greater depths in downwelling than in upwelling zones

    Winter is coming: food web structure and seasonality in a subtropical freshwater coastal-lake

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    Indexación: Web of Science; Scopus.Food web studies provide a useful tool to assess the organization and complexity of natural communities. Nevertheless, the seasonal dynamics of food web properties, their environmental correlates, and potential association with community diversity and stability remain poorly studied. Here, we condensed an incomplete 6-year community dataset of a subtropical coastal lake to examine how monthly variation in diversity impacts food web structure over an idealized time series for an averaged year. Phytoplankton, zooplankton, macroinvertebrates, and fish were mostly resolved to species level (n = 120 trophospecies). Our results showed that the seasonal organization of the food web could be aggregated into two clusters of months grouped here as ‘summer’ and ‘winter’. During ‘winter’, the food web decreases in size and complexity, with the number of trophospecies dropping from 106 to 82 (a 22.6% decrease in the number of nodes) and the trophic interactions from 1,049 to 637 between month extremes (a 39.3% drop in the number of links). The observed simplification in food web structure during ‘winter’ suggests that community stability is more vulnerable to the impact of any change during this period.http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.3031/epd

    Export and turnover of transparent exopolymer particles into the deep ocean

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    2nd Meeting of the Iberian Ecological Society (SIBECOL), XXI conference of the Iberian Association of Limnology (AIL) and 21st National Congress of the Portuguese Ecological Society (SPECO), 3-8 July 2022, AveiroAcidic polysaccharides released by phytoplankton and prokaryotic heterotrophs promote the formation of gel-like transparent exopolymer particles (TEPs). TEPs play a key role in the biological carbon pump due to their carbon-rich composition and their ability to coagulate and sink towards the deep ocean. Yet, very little is known about TEP distribution, export, and turnover at a global scale, particularly at deep ocean depths. We provide the first inventory of TEP from the surface up to 4000 m depth in the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans and have assessed their contribution to carbon export into the deep ocean. Primary production determines TEP concentration above the deep chlorophyll maximum, and prokaryotic biomass also contributes in deeper waters. In the deep ocean waters, TEP concentrations are lower and mirror the concentrations in the surface, evidencing the importance of TEP sinking both at the export depth (200 m) with a global value of 2.9 Pg C year-1 and at the sequestration depth (1000 m) of 0.9 Pg C year-1 of particulate carbon. However, incubation experiments across ocean basins depicted rapid TEP turnover rates of 71 and 333 days (on average) within the export and sequestration depths, respectively. These findings reveal that the export of carbon by TEP sinking towards deep oceans escapes from long-term paths of the global carbon cycleN

    Large carbon export, but short residence times, of transparent exopolymer particles in the global ocean

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    ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting 2023, Resilience and Recovery in Aquatic Systems, 4–9 June 2023, Palma de Mallorca, SpainAcidic polysaccharides released by phytoplankton and prokaryotic heterotrophs promote the formation of gel-like transparent exopolymer particles (TEPs). TEPs can have a relevant contribution to the biological carbon pump due to their carbon-rich composition and their ability to coagulate and sink towards the deep ocean. However, little is known about TEPs distribution, carbon export, and residence times below the export (200 m) and sequestration (1000 m) depths. We provide the first comprehensive inventory of TEP from the ocean surface to a depth of 4000 meters in the tropical and subtropical Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans, evaluating its contribution to carbon export and sequestration into the deep ocean. Results indicate that TEP concentration is primarily determined by primary production, with higher concentrations located above the deep chlorophyll maxima. In the deep ocean, TEP concentrations are lower yet mirror the concentrations in the surface, demonstrating the significance of TEP sinking below both the export compartment (2.8 Pg C yr-1; 27% of total POC flux at 200 m) and the sequestration compartment (0.8 Pg C yr-1; 36% of total POC flux at 1000 m). In situ incubation experiments conducted across ocean basins indicate short TEP residence times, averaging 27 and 333 days in the export and sequestration compartments, respectively. These findings reveal that the export and subsequent sequestration of carbon by TEP sinking into the deep ocean diverts it from the long times observed for the dissolved carbon fraction (i.e. centuries) in the global carbon cycleN
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