Taxonomic identity, biodiversity, and antecedent disturbances shape the dimensional stability of stream invertebrates

Author:

Allen Daniel C.1ORCID,Gill Brian A.2ORCID,Metcalfe Anya3ORCID,Bonjour Sophia4ORCID,Starr Scott5,Wang Junna6,Valentin Diana7,Grimm Nancy B.8

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecosystem Science and Management The Pennsylvania State University University Park Pennsylvania USA

2. School of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA

3. U.S. Geological Survey Southwest Biological Science Center, Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center Flagstaff Arizona USA

4. Division of Biology Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USA

5. Biology Department Hampden‐Sydney College Hampden‐Sydney Virginia USA

6. Department of Environmental Science and Policy University of California Davis California USA

7. School of Earth and Sustainability Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona USA

8. School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University Tempe Arizona USA

Abstract

AbstractThe “dimensional stability” approach measures different components of ecological stability to investigate how they are related. Yet, most empirical work has used small‐scale and short‐term experimental manipulations. Here, we apply this framework to a long‐term observational dataset of stream macroinvertebrates sampled between the winter flooding and summer monsoon seasons. We test hypotheses that relate variation among stability metrics across different taxa, the magnitude of antecedent (monsoon) and immediate (winter) floods to stability metrics, and the relative importance of disturbance magnitude and taxonomic richness on community dimensional stability. Cluster analysis revealed four distinct stability types, and we found that the magnitude of floods during the prior monsoon was more important in influencing stability than the winter flood itself. For dimensional stability at the community level, taxonomic richness was more important than disturbance magnitude. This work demonstrates that abiotic and biotic factors determine dimensional stability in a natural ecosystem.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Oceanography

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