Freshwater Centre, Finnish Environment Institute, PO Box 413, 90014, Oulu, Finland.
Department of Ecology and Genetics, University of Oulu, PO Box 8000, 90014, Oulu, Finland.
Ecol Appl. 2018 Sep;28(6):1606-1615. doi: 10.1002/eap.1762. Epub 2018 Jul 5.
The effects of anthropogenic stressors on community structure and ecosystem functioning can be strongly influenced by local habitat structure and dispersal from source communities. Catchment land uses increase the input of fine sediments into stream channels, clogging the interstitial spaces of benthic habitats. Aquatic macrophytes enhance habitat heterogeneity and mediate important ecosystem functions, being thus a key component of habitat structure in many streams. Therefore, the recovery of macrophytes following in-stream habitat modification may be prerequisite for successful stream restoration. Restoration success is also affected by dispersal of organisms from the source community, with potentially the strongest responses in relatively isolated headwater sites that receive a limited amount of dispersing individuals. We used a factorial design in a set of stream mesocosms to study the independent and combined effects of an anthropogenic stressor (sand sedimentation), local habitat (macrophytes, i.e., moss transplants), and enhanced dispersal (two levels: high vs. low) on organic matter retention, algal accrual rate, leaf decomposition, and macroinvertebrate community structure. Overall, all responses were simple additive effects with no interactions between treatments. Sand reduced algal accumulation, total invertebrate density, and density of a few individual taxa. Mosses reduced algal accrual rate and algae-grazing invertebrates, but enhanced organic matter retention and the number of detritus and filter feeders. Mosses also reduced macroinvertebrate diversity by increasing the dominance by a few taxa. Mosses reduced leaf mass loss, possibly because the organic matter retained by mosses provided an additional food source for leaf-shredding invertebrates and thus reduced shredder aggregation into leaf packs. The effect of mosses on macroinvertebrate communities and ecosystem functioning was distinct irrespective of the level of dispersal, suggesting strong environmental control of community structure. The strong environmental control of macroinvertebrate community composition even under enhanced dispersal suggests that re-establishing key habitat features, such as natural stream vegetation, could aid ecosystem recovery in boreal streams.
人为压力源对群落结构和生态系统功能的影响,受当地生境结构和源群落扩散的影响较大。集水区土地利用增加了细沉积物输入溪流通道,堵塞了底栖生境的空隙。水生大型植物增强了生境异质性并介导了重要的生态系统功能,因此是许多溪流生境结构的关键组成部分。因此,在溪流生境改造后,大型植物的恢复可能是溪流恢复成功的前提。恢复的成功也受到源群落生物扩散的影响,在相对孤立的源头地点,由于接受的扩散个体数量有限,可能会产生最强的响应。我们在一组溪流中使用了一个因子设计来研究人为压力源(泥沙沉积)、当地生境(大型植物,即苔藓移植)和增强扩散(两个水平:高 vs. 低)对有机物保留、藻类积累率、叶片分解和大型无脊椎动物群落结构的独立和综合影响。总的来说,所有的反应都是简单的附加效应,没有处理之间的相互作用。泥沙减少了藻类的积累、总无脊椎动物密度和一些个别分类群的密度。苔藓减少了藻类积累率和藻类食草无脊椎动物,但增加了有机物保留和碎屑和滤食者的数量。苔藓还通过增加少数几个类群的优势度降低了大型无脊椎动物的多样性。苔藓减少了叶片质量损失,这可能是因为苔藓保留的有机物为叶片食碎屑无脊椎动物提供了额外的食物来源,从而减少了碎屑食碎屑动物在叶片堆积物中的聚集。苔藓对大型无脊椎动物群落和生态系统功能的影响与扩散水平无关,这表明群落结构受到强烈的环境控制。在增强扩散的情况下,大型无脊椎动物群落组成受到强烈的环境控制,这表明重新建立关键的生境特征,如天然溪流植被,可以帮助北方溪流的生态系统恢复。