Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/215934
Title: Unravelling large-scale patterns and drivers of biodiversity in dry rivers
Author: Foulquier, Arnaud
Datry, Thibault
Corti, Roland
Schiller Calle, Daniel von
Tockner, Klement
Stubbington, Rachel
Gessner, Mark O.
Boyer, Frédéric
Ohlmann, Marc
Thuiller, Wilfried
Rioux, Delphine
Miquel, Christian
Albariño, Ricardo
Allen, Daniel C.
Altermatt, Florian
Arce, Maria Isabel
Shai, Arnon
Banas, Damien
Banegas-Medina, Andy
Beller, Erin
Blanchette, Melanie L.
Blessing, Joanna
Gonçalves Boëchat, Iola
Boersma, Kate
Bogan, Michael
Bonada i Caparrós, Núria
Bond, Nick
Brintrup, Katherine
Bruder, Andreas
Burrows, Ryan
Cancellario, Tommaso
Canhoto, Cristina
Carlson, Stephanie
Cid Puey, Núria
Cornut, Julien
Danger, Michael
de Freitas Terra, Bianca
De Girolamo, Anna Maria
del Campo, Rubén
Díaz Villanueva, Verónica
Dyer, Fiona
Elosegi, Arturo, 1962-
Febria, Catherine
Figueroa Jara, Ricardo
Four, Brian
Gafny, Sarig
Gómez, Rosa
Gómez-Gener, Lluís
Guareschi, Simone
Gücker, Björn
Hwan, Jason
Jones, J. Iwan
Kubheka, Patrick S.
Laini, Alex
Langhans, Simone Daniela
Launay, Bertrand
Le Goff, Gillaume
Leigh, Catherine
Little, Chelsea
Lorenz, Stefan
Marshall, Jonathan
Martin Sanz, Eduardo J.
McIntosh, Angus
Mendoza-Lera, Clara
Meyer, Elisabeth I.
Miliša, Marko
Mlambo, Musa C.
Morais, Manuela
Moya, Nabor
Negus, Peter
Niyogi, Dev
Pagán, Iluminada
Papatheodoulou, Athina
Pappagallo, Giuseppe
Pardo, Isabel
Pařil, Petr
Pauls, Steffen U.
Polášek, Marek
Rodríguez- Lozano, Pablo
Rolls, Robert J.
Sánchez-Montoya, Maria Mar
Savić, Ana
Shumilova, Oleksandra
Sridhar, Kandikere R.
Steward, Alisha
Taleb, Amina
Uzan, Avi
Valladares, Yefrin
Vander Vorste, Ross
Waltham, Nathan J.
Zak, Dominik H.
Zoppini, Annamaria
Keywords: Cursos d'aigua
Biodiversitat
Nutrients (Medi ambient)
Rivers
Biodiversity
Nutrients (Ecology)
Issue Date: 22-Aug-2024
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Abstract: More than half of the world’s rivers dry up periodically, but our understanding of the biological communities in dry riverbeds remains limited. Specifically, the roles of dispersal, environmental filtering and biotic interactions in driving biodiversity in dry rivers are poorly understood. Here, we conduct a large-scale coordinated survey of patterns and drivers of biodiversity in dry riverbeds. We focus on eight major taxa, including microorganisms, invertebrates and plants: Algae, Archaea, Bacteria, Fungi, Protozoa, Arthropods, Nematodes and Streptophyta. We use environmental DNA metabarcoding to assess biodi- versity in dry sediments collected over a 1-year period from 84 non-perennial rivers across 19 countries on four continents. Both direct factors, such as nutrient and carbon availability, and indirect factors such as climate influence the local biodiversity of most taxa. Limited resource availability and prolonged dry phases favor oligotrophic microbial taxa. Co-variation among taxa, parti- cularly Bacteria, Fungi, Algae and Protozoa, explain more spatial variation in community composition than dispersal or environmental gradients. Thisfinding suggests that biotic interactions or unmeasured ecological and evo- lutionary factors may strongly influence communities during dry phases, altering biodiversity responses to global changes.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50873-1
It is part of: Nature Communications, 2024, vol. 15, p. 1-15
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/215934
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50873-1
ISSN: 2041-1723
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Biologia Evolutiva, Ecologia i Ciències Ambientals)

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