Climate change is poised to alter mountain stream ecosystem processes via organismal phenological shifts

Author:

Leathers Kyle1ORCID,Herbst David2,de Mendoza Guillermo13ORCID,Doerschlag Gabriella1,Ruhi Albert1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720

2. Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Laboratory, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106

3. Institute of Biology and Earth Sciences, Pomeranian University in Słupsk, Słupsk 76-200, Poland

Abstract

Climate change is affecting the phenology of organisms and ecosystem processes across a wide range of environments. However, the links between organismal and ecosystem process change in complex communities remain uncertain. In snow-dominated watersheds, snowmelt in the spring and early summer, followed by a long low-flow period, characterizes the natural flow regime of streams and rivers. Here, we examined how earlier snowmelt will alter the phenology of mountain stream organisms and ecosystem processes via an outdoor mesocosm experiment in stream channels in the Eastern Sierra Nevada, California. The low-flow treatment, simulating a 3- to 6-wk earlier return to summer baseflow conditions projected under climate change scenarios in the region, increased water temperature and reduced biofilm production to respiration ratios by 32%. Additionally, most of the invertebrate species explaining community change (56% and 67% of the benthic and emergent taxa, respectively), changed in phenology as a consequence of the low-flow treatment. Further, emergent flux pulses of the dominant insect group (Chironomidae) almost doubled in magnitude, benefitting a generalist riparian predator. Changes in both invertebrate community structure (composition) and functioning (production) were mostly fine-scale, and response diversity at the community level stabilized seasonally aggregated responses. Our study illustrates how climate change in vulnerable mountain streams at the rain-to-snow transition is poised to alter the dynamics of stream food webs via fine-scale changes in phenology—leading to novel predator–prey “matches” or “mismatches” even when community structure and ecosystem processes appear stable at the annual scale.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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