生物多样性
生态学
底栖区
生物扩散
环境科学
淡水生态系统
地理
β多样性
构造盆地
流域
生态系统
生物
人口
地图学
古生物学
人口学
社会学
作者
Liang Huang,Huiyu Xie,Fuhong Sun,Aibin Zhan,Bo‐Ping Han,Xutao Wang,Jian Xu,Andrew C. Johnson,Fengchang Wu,Xiaowei Jin
标识
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.5c03559
摘要
Freshwater biodiversity faces an unprecedented decline from multiple stressors, yet conventional assessment approaches often inadequately capture complex ecological responses, especially in heavily urbanized river systems. Here we implemented a multidimensional biodiversity framework in China's most urbanized basin─the Pearl River Basin─to investigate how macroinvertebrate and diatom communities respond to spatial factors and multiple stressors across climatic, hydrological, water quality, and land-use gradients. Based on two-year surveys at 50 sites (2020-2021), we found that (1) Basin-scale α-diversity increased longitudinally, whereas β-diversity decreased, with macroinvertebrates showing pronounced diversity attenuation in urbanized middle and downstream; (2) Spatial factors explained 61.0-83.1% of explained variance in macroinvertebrate α-diversity, indicating dispersal limitation as the primary assembly mechanism. In contrast, environmental drivers accounted for 66.2-77.5% of explained variance in diatom communities, reflecting stronger environmental filtering. Additionally, stochastic processes played an important role in shaping the assembly of both groups. (3) Multidiversity indices demonstrated significantly enhanced sensitivity to influence factors (84.9% for α-diversity and 12.9% for β-diversity), outperforming single-taxon metrics in detecting community-level responses to multiple pressures. Our findings highlight the importance of integrating taxonomic, functional, and phylogenetic diversity across levels when assessing ecosystem responses to complex environmental stressors, with direct implications for more effective biodiversity monitoring and conservation in human-disturbed river basins.
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