Research

Publications
Title: Different roles for geography, energy and environment in determining three facets of freshwater molluscan beta diversity at broad spatial scales
First author: Cai, Yongjiu; Xu, Jun; Zhang, Min; Wang, Jianjun; Heino, Jani
Journal: SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Years: 2019
Volume / issue: 659 /
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.12.373
Abstract: Current understanding of different facets of beta diversity and their underlying determinants remains limited at broad scales in the freshwater realm. We examined the geographical patterns and spatial congruence of three beta diversity facets of freshwatermolluscs across all of China, and evaluated the relative importance of environmental and spatial factors underlying the observed patterns. Taxonomic (beta-TD), functional (beta-FD) and phylogenetic (beta-PD) beta diversity were calculated for 212 drainage basins belonging to 10 hydrographic regions using compiled occurrence data of 313 molluscan species. Geographical patterns of the three diversity facets were visualized on maps and pairwise spatial congruence among them was evaluated using regression on distance matrices. Variation partitioning and multivariate regression trees were used to assess the relative importance of different factors underlying beta diversity patterns. Beta diversity maps revealed that geographical patterns of beta-TD and beta-PD showed strong spatial clustering and were well matched with hydrographic regions' boundaries, while beta-FD showed only moderate spatial aggregation. The three facets were only moderately congruent, with over 60% of the variation in one facet remaining unexplained by any other facet. Remarkably, all diversity facets were best explained by the spatial factors with considerable unique effects. Environmental filtering associated with energy gradients also made a large contribution, while habitat availability only explained minor fractions of the variation in beta diversity. At the national scale, beta-TD and beta-PD were more strongly related to spatial processes, whereas beta-FD was more strongly associated with energy gradients. Our results suggested that, for freshwater organisms with low dispersal capacity, dispersal processes may over ride environmental filtering in driving geographical diversity patterns. However, different ecological drivers were important for each diversity facet. Importantly, rather weak spatial congruence among the different diversity facets stresses the need to incorporate functional and phylogenetic facets into the development of conservation planning. (c) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.