Document details

Multi-biologic group analysis for an ecosystem response to longitudinal river regulation gradients

Author(s): Rivaes, Rui Pedro ; Feio, Maria João ; Almeida, Salomé F. P. ; Vieira, Cristiana ; Calapez, Ana R. ; Mortágua, Andreia ; Gebler, Daniel ; Lozanovska, Ivana ; Aguiar, Francisca C.

Date: 2021

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/37400

Origin: RIA - Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro

Subject(s): River damming; Biodiversity; Functional ecology; Upstream-downstream gradient; Biologic relationships


Description

This work assesses the effects of river regulation on the diversity of different instream and riparian biological communities along a relieve gradient of disturbance in regulated rivers. Two case studies in Portugal were used, with different river regulation typology (downstream of run-of-river and reservoir dams), where regulated and free-flowing river stretches were surveyed for riparian vegetation, macrophytes, bryophytes, macroalgae, diatoms and macroinvertebrates. The assessment of the regulation effects on biological communities was approached by both biological and functional diversity analysis. Results of this investigation endorse river regulation as a major factor differentiating fluvial biological communities through an artificial environmental filtering that governs species assemblages by accentuating species traits related to river regulation tolerance. Communities' response to regulation gradient seem to be similar and insensitive to river regulation typology. Biological communities respond to this regulation gradient with different sensibilities and rates of response, with riparian vegetation and macroinvertebrates being the most responsive to river regulation and its gradient. Richness appears to be the best indicator for general fluvial ecological quality facing river regulation. Nevertheless, there are high correlations between the biological and functional diversity indices of different biological groups, which denotes biological connections indicative of a cascade of effects leading to an indirect influence of river regulation even on non-responsive facets of communities' biological and functional diversities. These results highlight the necessary holistic perspective of the fluvial system when assessing the effects of river regulation and the proposal of restoration measures.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
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