Phytoplankton species and traits response to a gradient of urbanization in subtropical lowland streams

Author:

Frau Diego1ORCID,Pineda Alfonso2

Affiliation:

1. Instituto Nacional de Limnología (CONICET‐UNL) Ciudad Universitaria Santa Fe 3000 Argentina

2. Programa de pós‐graduação em Biologia Comparada – PGB Universidade Estadual de Maringá‐UEM Maringá PR Brazil

Abstract

AbstractLotic environments are among the most vulnerable aquatic ecosystems, and changes occurring in them happen faster than our capacity to measure the impacts, with the choice of community attributes that best reflect these disturbances still unclear. In this study, we evaluated the response of phytoplankton species and species traits along a gradient of urbanization in lowland streams. To do this, we sampled nine streams in three areas classified as densely populated (DP), low populated (LP), and rural areas (RA) during the four seasons (n = 108), considering relevant limnological variables (including metals, herbicides, and inorganic nutrients) and phytoplankton. Phytoplankton was analysed using taxonomic and morpho‐functional traits approaches. We used several multivariate analyses to assess phytoplankton species and trait distribution among stream groups (DP, LP, RA) and identify their environmental drivers. We found that phytoplankton responded to the urbanization gradient at both taxonomic and functional levels. However, this response was mediated by the land use (urban vs. rural) rather than its intensity. The main stressors detected were eutrophic conditions and organic matter contamination, which differed among groups (DP‐LP and RA). Both approximations indicated eutrophic, organically enriched conditions, but the situation varied among seasons and stream groups. The response of the taxonomic approach was clearer than the traits‐based approach, showing differences in density only between stream groups in the summer and the spring. Phytoplankton was responding to the gradient of urbanization in these subtropical lowland streams, but the seasonality, especially temperature and changes in the water column mixing also mediate the effect.

Publisher

Wiley

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