Unravelling large-scale patterns and drivers of biodiversity in dry rivers

Author

Foulquier, Arnaud

Datry, Thibault

Corti, Roland

von Schiller, Daniel

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

Arnon, Shai

Banas, Damien

Banegas-Medina, Andy

Beller, Erin

Blanchette, Melanie L.

Blessing, Joanna

Gonçalves Boëchat, Iola

Boersma, Kate

Bogan, Michael

Bonada, Núria

Bond, Nick

Brintrup, Katherine

Bruder, Andreas

Burrows, Ryan

Cancellario, Tommaso

Canhoto, Cristina

Carlson, Stephanie

Cid, Núria

Cornut, Julien

Danger, Michael

de Feritas Terra, Bianca

De Girolamo, Anna Maria

del Campo, Rubén

Díaz Villanueva, Verónica

Dyer, Fiona

Elosegi, Arturo

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, Guillaume

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

Publication date

2024-08-22



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 biodiversity 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, particularly Bacteria, Fungi, Algae and Protozoa, explain more spatial variation in community composition than dispersal or environmental gradients. This finding suggests that biotic interactions or unmeasured ecological and evolutionary factors may strongly influence communities during dry phases, altering biodiversity responses to global changes.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

15

Publisher

Nature Research

Published in

Nature Communications

Grant Agreement Number

EC/H2020/869226/EU/Securing biodiversity, functional integrity and ecosystem services in DRYing rivER networks/DRYvER

MICIU/Programa Estatal de promoción del talento y su empleabilidad en I+D+I/IJC2019-041601-I/ES/ /

Recommended citation

Foulquier, Arnaud, Thibault Datry, Roland Corti, Daniel Von Schiller, Klement Tockner, Rachel Stubbington, Mark O. Gessner, et al. 2024. “Unravelling Large-scale Patterns and Drivers of Biodiversity in Dry Rivers.” Nature Communications 15 (1): 7233. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50873-1.

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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