Introduction
Novel and intensifying levels of anthropogenic pressures on ecosystems is leading to global and regional biodiversity declines at unprecedented rates, acting together with climate change (Sol et al.
2017; Cardoso et al.
2020). However, land use change and different forms of pollution remain equally important in conservation and management decisions (Maxwell et al.
2016; Titeux et al.
2016). At local and landscape scales, both pressures have been found to exert greater dominance in driving biodiversity losses than climate change in marine, terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems (Jaureguiberry et al.
2022). Rivers support a disproportionate level of biodiversity (Strayer and Dudgeon
2010), but have suffered losses far exceeding their terrestrial and marine counterparts (Grooten and Almond
2018; Tickner et al.
2020; Albert et al.
2021). Rivers often demonstrate elevated levels of anthropogenic modification due to high societal and ecosystem values (food, amenities, transport, energy), and high connectivity in the landscape (Lynch et al.
2016;
2023; Heino and Koljonen
2022). A recent call by Dudgeon (
2019) stated that despite being under existential threat from climate change, freshwater systems are facing far greater concerns related to damming, habitat degradation and pollution.
The construction of instream barriers, such as dams and weirs, has led to hydrological and morphological impairment in many fluvial systems globally (Grill et al.
2019). In Europe alone, it is estimated that over 1.2 million barriers fragment fluvial networks (Belletti et al.
2020), which has multidimensional consequences regarding landscape connectivity and instream habitat quality, and with subsequent implications for food webs (Kondolf
1997; Wohl
2017). Together, changing land-use practices, and the increase in urban settlements and wastewater treatment discharges over the last century, have had significant effects on water quality and macronutrient levels (N and P) of freshwaters globally (Whelan et al.
2022; Heino et al.
2023). As such, habitat degradation via nutrient loads and fine sediment, which can act independently or in synergy, can have considerable effects on stream organisms (Wood and Armitage
1997; Matthaei et al.
2010; Robinson et al.
2014).
Environmental filtering suggests that biotic communities are organised along environmental gradients. Sensitive taxa are excluded as anthropogenic pressure increases, whereas generalist species are able to persist in sub-optimal and homogenised conditions. This, in turn, often leads to the homogenisation of biotic communities (Rolls et al.
2023), and a reduction in species diversity as the community becomes dominated by generalist species as multi-stress levels increase (Barnum et al.
2017). In this context, various alpha diversity metrics such as overall taxonomic richness and Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and Trichoptera (EPT) richness form the basis of most biomonitoring programs as measures of lotic ecosystem health (Schmidt-Kloiber and Nijboer
2004; Callanan et al.
2008). Alongside gamma diversity (measured at landscape or catchment scale), these metrics may enable indication of whether species loss is occurring at a local scale (alpha richness) or whether there are coarser scale changes in taxa identity (Socolar et al.
2016).
However, some studies have found increasing alpha richness when anthropogenic disturbance leads to increasing resource levels and productivity (Hillebrand et al.
2018). As such, there may be incongruence between biodiversity metrics (Maloney et al.,
2011), and numerical indices may overlook changes in species identity should specialist species be lost and replaced by generalist taxa. Application of different metrics in isolation or without consideration of species identity may therefore lead to misclassification of riverine ecosystem health and thus misguide conservation efforts.
In recent years, functional diversity based on biological traits has become a useful tool to evaluate biological patterns (Bonada et al.
2006; Schmera et al.
2017), including those associated with anthropogenic stressors (Mouillot et al.
2013; Barnum et al.
2017). Functional diversity offers a link between ecosystem functioning and biodiversity and is assumed to provide a proxy of mechanistic knowledge of why a change in biodiversity occurred rather than just observing the change itself. Trait-based community descriptors may represent a valuable biomonitoring tool and are particularly powerful when used together with traditional taxonomic metrics (Menezes et al.
2010; Paz et al.
2023). Measures of functional evenness, richness and divergence (Mouillot et al.
2013; Martins et al.,
2021) are considered useful early warning tools for detecting riverine degradation. However, the relatively limited number of studies that have tested this assumption have shown conflicting results (Barnum et al.
2017; Ding et al.
2017), thus their use requires further consideration.
Alongside the increasing application of functional diversity indices, developments in beta diversity research (Anderson et al.
2011) also may enhance our ability to understand the effects of environmental stressors on freshwaters, with important practical applications for conservation efforts (Vilmi et al.
2017; Hill et al.
2021; Heino et al.
2022). Based on environmental filtering theory, beta diversity represents a potentially valuable metric to assess biodiversity when anthropogenic stress leads to biotic homogenisation (Rolls et al.
2023). A metric associated with beta diversity is called “local contribution to beta diversity” (LCBD; Legendre and De Cáceres
2013). This metric quantifies the ecological uniqueness of each site within a landscape context (Legendre and De Cáceres
2013; Heino and Grönroos
2017), and it can be further partitioned into replacement and richness difference components (Legendre
2014). In this context, understanding the processes affecting biodiversity can contribute to the development of conservation and management practices (Heino et al.
2023). High LCBD values may reflect unusual species composition and/or unique environmental conditions (high conservation value) or may represent degraded sites that support low taxa richness (high richness difference) that could be considered restoration targets (Legendre
2014). To date, the majority of LCBD studies were based on ecological data, but further insights into environmental processes structuring biodiversity associated with anthropogenic stressors may be gained by extending this approach to include environmental information (Castro et al.
2019; Heino et al.
2022).
In this study, we examined if a near-natural and a degraded lotic system differed in taxonomic and functional measures of macroinvertebrate communities. We hypothesised that: H1) alpha, beta and gamma diversity would be greatest in the near-natural system associated with greater habitat heterogeneity and good water quality, and H2) taxonomic and functional structure would be related to environmental conditions associated with the degree of anthropogenic disturbance present in each system. By using a combination of commonly employed community measures, we examined the processes structuring biodiversity, and tested whether all metrics provided effective biomonitoring and conservation tools.
Discussion
In this study, we examined how anthropogenic degradation affects alpha, beta and gamma diversity of stream aquatic invertebrates. In contrast to our hypothesis (H1), we observed that alpha diversity (taxa richness) was greater in the degraded than near-natural river, whilst community abundance, EPT richness (widely used as a bioindicator of pollution-sensitive taxa including fine sediment deposition) and functional richness demonstrated no statistical differences between rivers. Similarly, gamma and beta diversity were comparable between the two rivers, and only the Glatt recorded significant LCBD values (two sites). However, the two rivers supported considerably different taxonomic and functional compositions. Differences between rivers in structural composition of invertebrate communities were due to species replacement (75%), whilst functional community composition differences were driven by richness differences (67%). LCBD showed no significant differences between rivers, most likely reflecting the relatively low heterogeneity between macroinvertebrate communities in the rivers. No significant variability in environmental conditions were evident for the Necker, whereas environmental conditions in the Glatt were highly variable with significant heterogeneity and Glatt sites demonstrated greater environmental uniqueness based on LCEH values than Necker sites. Despite this, no significant differences were recorded in multivariate dispersion of invertebrate communities between the rivers. This finding suggests that despite environmental conditions being highly heterogeneous in the Glatt, associated with different environmental stressors (total nitrogen and fine sediment), the general degradation of the system (habitat quality) has led to considerable environmental filtering resulting in a relatively homogeneous community throughout. The pool of taxa present in the Glatt consisted of generalist, highly tolerant taxa that occur throughout most of the system (Gafner and Robinson
2007).
In the Glatt, anthropogenic stress has increased environmental extremes throughout the system and more heterogeneous abiotic conditions, (based on greater environmental variability in multivariate dispersion), suggesting that the system is in an ongoing state of anthropogenic disturbance. This is contrast to the anticipated homogenisation of environmental conditions in the degraded system. We also observed that there was no longitudinal pattern in the environmental template or macroinvertebrate communities in either river (as shown in the multivariate plots). It appears therefore that the higher levels of resources via nutrient enrichment in the Glatt is supporting a comparably more diverse species pool than the Necker, even though species composition and community structure has been altered. The dynamic equilibrium model (Huston
1979,
1994), which integrates the intermediate disturbance (Connell
1978) and intermediate productivity (Grime
1973) hypotheses, highlights the interlinked nature of disturbance and productivity (e.g., resources). Despite the morphological impairment and longitudinal/lateral disconnection resulting from instream barriers, degradation in the system is moderately enhancing productivity, and suitable habitat for macroinvertebrates is still present for disturbance-tolerant species at the expense of ecologically sensitive ones (following Ward et al.
1999).
We tested two common functional metrics as indicators of environmental stress. Functional divergence is suggested to act as an early warning indicator of environment stress, as functional traits that are more sensitive to land use disturbance will typically lie on the fringe of trait space and thus are the first to be lost, resulting in reduced functional divergence values (Mouillot et al.
2013; Martins et al.,
2021). However, we found that the degraded Glatt had greater functional divergence values than the near-natural Necker. The findings of Barnum et al. (
2017) were similar; increasing urbanisation at the ecoregion level led to increasing functional divergence values. They suggested that functional divergence is not an early warning signal as hypothesised but still provides mechanistic insight into the redistribution of trait combinations in functional trait space. It is likely that the environmental implications of anthropogenic disturbance determine the ecological consequences for instream communities due to physical habitat alterations (flow, substrate quality, morphology), resulting in different ecological consequences than simply enhanced nutrient concentrations (Wagenhoff et al.
2011).
Low functional divergence values suggest that resource efficiency is low (Mason et al.,
2005). However, productivity was much higher in the degraded Glatt than the near-natural Necker; e.g., nitrogen and phosphorus levels were greater in the Glatt. Periphyton biomass also was an order of magnitude greater in the Glatt (Glatt = 1.2 × 10
–3 g cm
−3, Necker = 2.4 × 10
–4 g cm
−3; n = 30/river; Kowarik unpublished data). This result is mirrored by the greater values of functional divergence and evenness observed in the degraded Glatt. Low functional evenness (as observed in the Necker) suggests that although some parts of the trait niche space are occupied, these are being underutilised. In contrast, increased functional divergence in the degraded system likely reflects the increased productivity leading to greater niche space being available, which is evenly occupied. Similar findings of greater functional evenness were observed as primary productivity increases, being associated with increasing nutrient levels (Rideout et al.
2022). Results from the trait-environment and species-environment analyses provide further support with total nitrogen levels significantly influencing the structure of both taxonomic and functional communities (H2). Although functional metrics provide mechanistic evidence of underlying ecosystem processes driving community structure, they may not provide a generalizable indicator of environmental stress without contextual knowledge.
Importance of taxonomic identity for applied conservation
Our study demonstrates the importance of taxonomic knowledge of the taxa inhabiting a study system. By investigating community measures alone, it may appear that the degraded Glatt supports potentially more ecologically diverse taxa or that there is limited change in the richness of the perceived indictor group of EPT. Taking these result at face value could suggest that no conservation action is needed, or lead to misguided and ineffective conservation management strategies, particularly for the sensitive pre-Alpine streams investigated here and which support some species of conservation concern. Assessing just one aspect of diversity (e.g., richness or abundance) is insufficient to track biodiversity change associated with environmental stress, as reductions in environmental quality can often lead to increases in species richness (Hillebrand et al.
2018). Here, we emphasise that one should avoid attaching only one numerical value to diversity, but that a combination of biotic metrics and an underpinning knowledge of taxa identity are required to comprehensively understand the processes (such as anthropogenic degradation) structuring biodiversity, particularly when considered in the context of species turnover and replacement (Hillebrand et al.
2018; Li et al.
2020).
Our findings emphasise the strong limitation of employing biotic metrics without taxonomic knowledge of the species present in the systems being studied. Without considering the taxonomic identity of species, the value in fundamental diversity can be lost. Many of the unique taxa occurring in the Necker represent highly sensitive species, indicative of pristine or near-natural rivers that prefer fast current velocities, alpine or piedmont altitudes and clean waters. These specialist taxa were lost and replaced by generalists with stream degradation in the Glatt. Indeed, taxa unique to the Glatt were pollution-tolerant generalist species that prefer mud substrata, standing water or slow flows and are representative of lowland rivers. These include various Diptera and a large number of Mollusca, including the non-native mud-snail (
Potamopyrgus antipodarum)
. Several other studies have recorded similar views that specialist sensitive taxa are being replaced by generalist taxa, and that purely numerical richness metrics fail to detect this fundamental shift in community identity (Larsen et al.
2018; Hilpold et al.
2018).
Contemporary ecologists often have limited training in taxonomic methods and thus are unfamiliar with the natural histories and taxonomic knowledge of the organisms within their datasets/study sites. Such qualitative information is, however, vital for better mechanistic understanding of underlying ecological processes and patterns, which can better inform conservation practice (Kim and Byrne,
2006). However, taxonomic and trait information on species in mega-diverse and/or unexplored areas is often sparse, challenging the ability to incorporate these layers of information into conservation decisions. In these cases, numerical analyses of biodiversity patterns are useful, yet we urge ecologists to develop skills in taxonomic methods to gain better understanding of underlying bio-assembly rules. Like our findings, a number of community ecology studies have found that taxa identity and their natural histories are more important for determining community structure than species richness patterns, and thus tracking species identity is essential (Olden and Rooney,
2006). Greater integration of taxonomy and ecology must be a priority for ecological and applied biodiversity studies moving forward (Gotelli,
2004; Hillebrand et al.
2018).
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