Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Zoology, School of Natural Sciences, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland; Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Aug 20;939:173106. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173106. Epub 2024 May 15.
Climate change and human land use are considered key threats to freshwater invertebrates. Heatwaves can impact the phenology of insects and population dynamics, yet have been largely ignored in experiments compared to mean temperature changes. Another major anthropogenic stressor driving invertebrate community changes is deposited fine sediment; therefore, effects of key climate-change drivers on invertebrate drift and insect emergence rates may differ between sediment-impacted and non-impacted streams. However, this has never been tested in a realistic outdoor experiment. We investigated the individual and combined effects of two 7-day heatwaves, CO enrichment, flow velocity variability (periods of fast and slow) and fine sediment on stream drift and emergence responses, sampled four times during a 7-week experiment in 128 flow-through stream mesocosms. We examined invertebrate drift and insect emergence responses to the four stressors, and used these responses to help explain the benthic invertebrate community responses already assessed (sampled at the end of the experiment). Heatwave 1 strongly increased emergence (dominated by Chironomidae), causing an earlier emergence peak, an effect not repeated during heatwave 2, seven days later. During heatwave 1, emerged chironomids were larger in heated channels, but smaller in heated channels afterwards, suggesting a different effect on body size of short-term heatwaves to previous constant warming experiments. CO enrichment reduced drifting EPT and total and Chironomidae emergence on three sampling occasions each. After heatwave 1, total drift and total emergence were strongly reduced by heating in ambient-CO channels, whereas no reduction occurred in CO-enriched channels. During heatwave 2, total drift increased in channels without sediment but not in channels with added sediment. Overall, our findings suggest heatwaves can shift the timing of stream insect emergence, regardless of longer-term mean temperatures. They also show that heatwaves, raised CO, and fine sediment can modulate each others' effects on drift and emergence dynamics.
气候变化和人类土地利用被认为是淡水无脊椎动物的主要威胁。热浪会影响昆虫的物候和种群动态,但与平均温度变化相比,在实验中受到的关注较少。另一个导致无脊椎动物群落变化的主要人为压力源是沉积细泥沙;因此,关键气候变化驱动因素对受泥沙影响和未受泥沙影响溪流中无脊椎动物漂流和昆虫出现率的影响可能不同。然而,这在现实的室外实验中从未得到过检验。我们在 128 个流动式溪流中观测试验中,调查了两个为期 7 天的热浪、CO 富集、流速变异性(快速和慢速时期)和细泥沙对溪流漂流和出现反应的单独和联合影响,共进行了四次采样,持续 7 周。我们研究了无脊椎动物漂流和昆虫出现对这四个压力源的反应,并利用这些反应来帮助解释已经评估过的底栖无脊椎动物群落反应(在实验结束时采样)。第一个热浪强烈增加了出现率(主要是摇蚊科),导致出现高峰提前,而在 7 天后的第二个热浪中没有重复出现这种情况。在第一个热浪期间,加热通道中出现的摇蚊体型较大,但之后在加热通道中体型较小,这表明短期热浪对身体大小的影响与之前的恒温变暖实验不同。CO 富集在三个采样点减少了漂流的 EPT 和总类和摇蚊科的出现。在第一个热浪之后,加热会强烈减少背景 CO 通道中的总漂流和总出现,但在 CO 富集通道中不会发生这种情况。在第二个热浪期间,没有添加泥沙的通道中的总漂流增加,但添加泥沙的通道中没有增加。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,热浪可以改变溪流昆虫出现的时间,而与长期平均温度无关。它们还表明,热浪、升高的 CO 和细泥沙可以调节彼此对漂流和出现动态的影响。