Species turnover and functional nestedness constitute the geographic patterns of stream diatoms in the Three Parallel Rivers region, China

Author:

Hu Jiancheng123ORCID,Xu Nuo24,Ao Sicheng5,Tan Lu1,Li Xianfu6,Cai Qinghua1,Tang Tao1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Wuhan China

2. School of Environmental Science and Engineering Hubei Polytechnic University Huangshi China

3. School of Resources and Environmental Engineering Wuhan University of Technology Wuhan China

4. College of Life Sciences Hubei Normal University Huangshi China

5. Key Laboratory of Urban Environment and Health, Ningbo Observation and Research Station Institute of Urban Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences Xiamen China

6. Institute of Eastern‐Himalaya Biodiversity Research Dali University Dali Yunnan China

Abstract

AbstractUnraveling biodiversity patterns and their driving processes is paramount in ecology and biogeography. However, there remains a limited understanding regarding the underlying mechanisms of community assembly, particularly in alpine streams where significant elevation gradients and habitat heterogeneity exist. We investigated the patterns and drivers of beta diversity, explicitly focusing on taxonomic and functional diversity, in the three parallel rivers region in China. We employed a beta diversity partitioning approach to examine the turnover and nestedness components of beta diversity and further deconstructed the diatom community into attached and unattached groups. Our results revealed distinct diversity patterns and drivers for taxonomic and functional beta diversity. Specifically, taxonomic beta diversity was mainly driven by the turnover component affected by spatial processes, whereas functional beta diversity was dominated by the nestedness component affected by environmental processes. Furthermore, our analysis of the division of the whole communities demonstrated that the varying responses of benthic diatoms with different attached abilities to environmental filtering, dispersal limitation, and directional flow were the essential reasons for shaping the biodiversity patterns of species turnover and functional nestedness in the alpine stream. Our findings suggested that partitioning beta diversity and dividing the entire community can more deeply infer underlying community assembly processes, thereby providing valuable insights into understanding biodiversity patterns, drivers, and conservation strategies.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation for Young Scientists of Shanxi Province

Publisher

Wiley

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