Biodiversity Research
Revealing a conservation challenge through partitioned long-term beta diversity: increasing turnover and decreasing nestedness of boreal lake metacommunities
Article first published online: 18 JAN 2013
DOI: 10.1111/ddi.12029
© 2013 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Issue

Diversity and Distributions
Early View (Online Version of Record published before inclusion in an issue)
Additional Information
How to Cite
Angeler, D. G. (2013), Revealing a conservation challenge through partitioned long-term beta diversity: increasing turnover and decreasing nestedness of boreal lake metacommunities. Diversity and Distributions. doi: 10.1111/ddi.12029
Publication History
- Article first published online: 18 JAN 2013
Funded by
- DYNAMO project
- REFRESH
- Adaptive Strategies to Mitigate the Impacts of Climate Change on European Freshwater Ecosystems. Grant Number: 244121
- Abstract
- Article
- References
- Cited By
Keywords:
- Biodiversity;
- environmental change;
- invertebrates;
- metacommunities;
- phytoplankton;
- spatial ecology;
- time series
Abstract
Aim
Assessing long-term (1992–2009) trends of littoral invertebrate and phytoplankton metacommunities in boreal lakes with emphasis on separating the nestedness and turnover components of beta diversity. Deriving implications for regional biodiversity conservation and management, based on a data-intensive approach with high ecological realism.
Location
Sweden (Northern Europe).
Methods
A recently published method was used to partition beta diversity into species turnover and nestedness components. Regression analyses were used to test for monotonic temporal change of these diversity fractions through time. Associations between the temporal diversity patterns of taxonomic groups and environmental variables were studied using correlation analyses.
Results
Turnover of both metacommunities increased monotonically over the study period, while nestedness decreased. In invertebrates, these changes correlated mainly with regional changes in acidity, while phytoplankton responded more to changing water clarity. Nestedness and turnover patterns were inversely correlated in both groups, but neither turnover nor nestedness was correlated between invertebrates and phytoplankton. Nestedness of both groups explained a lower percentage of the partitioned variance compared with turnover.
Main conclusion
Results suggest that all lakes contribute more equally to regional diversity over time and are, as a result, all potential targets of management actions. Not only is a regional conservation strategy logistically difficult, it is also a financially expensive expectation.

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