Anthropogenic land ‒use impacts on the size structure of macroinvertebrate assemblages are jointly modulated by local conditions and spatial processes

Environ Res. 2021 Sep 15:112055. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2021.112055. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTBody size descriptors and associated resemblance measurements may provide useful tools for forecasting ecological responses to increasing anthropogenic land‒use disturbances. Yet, the influences of agriculture and urbanisation on the size structure of biotic assemblages have seldom been investigated in running waters. Using a comprehensive dataset on stream macroinvertebrates from 21 river basins across Western Finland, we assessed whether the structure of assemblages via changes in taxonomic composition and body size distributions responded predictably to anthropogenic land‒use impacts. Specifically, we applied a combination of resemblance measurements based on cumulative abundance profiles and spatially constrained null models to understand faunal impairment by agricultural and urban development, and the most likely mechanisms underlying the observed shifts in assemblage size structure. Anthropogenically impacted stream sites showed less variation in assemblage composition and size distributions compared with least‒disturbed sites, with strong declines in internal variation also occurring for the transition from near‒pristine to moderately impacted landscapes. These results were consistent whether based on species‒level or genus‒level data. Variation in assemblage size structure seemed to be more predictable than taxonomic composition, supporting the notion that res...
Source: Environmental Research - Category: Environmental Health Authors: Source Type: research