Ecology of Saline Watersheds: An Investigation of the Functional Communities and Drivers of Benthic Fauna in Typical Water Bodies of the Irtysh River Basin

Author:

Zi Fangze1,Wang Baoqiang2ORCID,Yang Liting1,Huo Qiang1,Wang Zhichao1,Ren Daoquan1,Huo Bin3,Song Yong1,Chen Shengao1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Tarim Research Center of Rare Fishes, College of Life Sciences and Technology, Tarim University, Alar 843300, China

2. Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430072, China

3. College of Fisheries, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan 430070, China

Abstract

In this study, we investigated how changes in salinity affect biodiversity and function in 11 typical water bodies in the Altai region. The salinity of the freshwater bodies ranged from 0 to 5, the brackish water salinities ranged from 5 to 20, and the hypersaline environments had salinities > 20. We identified 11 orders, 34 families, and 55 genera in 3061 benthic samples and classified them into 10 traits and 32 categories. Subsequently, we conducted Mantel tests and canonical correlation analysis (CCA) and calculated biodiversity and functional diversity indices for each sampling site. The results indicated that biodiversity and the proportion of functional traits were greater in freshwater environments than in saline environments and decreased gradually with increasing salinity. Noticeable shifts in species distribution were observed in high-salinity environments and were accompanied by specific functional traits such as swimming ability, smaller body sizes, and air-breathing adaptations. The diversity indices revealed that the species were more evenly distributed in high-diversity environments under the influence of salinity. In contrast, in high-salinity environments, only a few species dominated. The results suggested that increasing salinity accelerated the evolution of benthic communities, leading to reduced species diversity and functional homogenization. We recommend enhancing the monitoring of saline water resources and implementing sustainable water resource management to mitigate the impact of salinity stress on aquatic communities in response to climate-induced soil and water salinization.

Funder

the Third Xinjiang Scientific Expedition Program

the National Natural Science Foundation of China

the Key Research Project of Science and Technology Bureau of Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps

Publisher

MDPI AG

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