AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how environmental factors and human impacts influence the distribution of fish communities in the Upper Paraná ecoregion in South America.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 586 fish sampling points, focusing on local beta diversity and alpha diversity, and found high beta diversity overall, with richer fish communities found more centrally in the ecoregion.
  • Key findings highlight that both environmental filters and dispersal limitations significantly shape fish assemblages, emphasizing the necessity of using multiple predictors to understand biodiversity better.

Article Abstract

Understanding how assemblages are structured in space and the factors promoting their distributions is one of the main goals in Ecology, however, studies regarding the distribution of organisms at larger scales remain biased towards terrestrial groups. We attempt to understand if the structure of stream fish metacommunities across a Neotropical ecoregion (Upper Paraná-drainage area of 820,000 km2) are affected by environmental variables, describing natural environmental gradient, anthropogenic impacts and spatial predictors. For this, we obtained 586 sampling points of fish assemblages in the ecoregion and data on environmental and spatial predictors that potentially affect fish assemblages. We calculated the local beta diversity (Local Contribution to Beta Diversity, LCBD) and alpha diversity from the species list, to be used as response variables in the partial regression models, while the anthropogenic impacts, environmental gradient and spatial factors were used as predictors. We found a high total beta diversity for the ecoregion (0.41) where the greatest values for each site sampled were located at the edges of the ecoregion, while richer communities were found more centrally. All sets of predictors explained the LCBD and alpha diversity, but the most important was dispersal variables, followed by the natural environmental gradient and anthropogenic impact. However, we found an increase in the models' prediction power through the shared effect. Results suggest that environmental filters (i.e. environmental variables such as climate, hydrology and anthropogenic impact) and dispersal limitation together shape fish assemblages of the Upper Paraná ecoregion, showing the importance of using multiple sets of predictors to understand the processes structuring biodiversity distribution.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7250414PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0233733PLOS

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