Stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on Icelandic freshwaters.

PhD Climate change and the accompanying increase in global surface temperatures pose a major threat to freshwater ecosystems, especially at high latitudes where warming is predicted to be particularly rapid. To date many aspects of how rising temperatures can impact fresh waters remain unknown. Info...

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Main Author: Pichler, Doris Evelyn
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Queen Mary University of London 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/8604
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spelling ftqueenmaryuniv:oai:qmro.qmul.ac.uk:123456789/8604 2023-05-15T16:49:06+02:00 Stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on Icelandic freshwaters. Pichler, Doris Evelyn 2012-09 http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/8604 en eng Queen Mary University of London Pichler, D.E. 2012. Stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on Icelandic freshwaters. Queen Mary University of London. http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/8604 The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without the prior written consent of the author Biology Ecology Climate change Iceland Freshwater ecosystems Thesis 2012 ftqueenmaryuniv 2022-09-25T20:14:31Z PhD Climate change and the accompanying increase in global surface temperatures pose a major threat to freshwater ecosystems, especially at high latitudes where warming is predicted to be particularly rapid. To date many aspects of how rising temperatures can impact fresh waters remain unknown. Information about temperature effects on the level of communities, food webs, ecosystems is especially scarce. The few studies focusing on higher levels of organisation have used either laboratory microcosm experiments, which can lack realism or space-for-time substitution across large ranges of latitude, which can be confounded by bio-geographical effects. This study aimed to overcome these shortcomings by using a “natural experiment” in a set of 16 geothermally heated streams in the Hengill area, South-West Iceland, with water temperatures ranging from 4ºC to 49ºC (mean temperature). Data were analysed for two seasons, August 2008 and April 2009. The principal goal of this study was to assess the effects of temperature on the structure and functioning of food webs. Additionally the persistence of the community structures along the temperature gradient was examined through time (comparison of previously collected data in August 2004 and August 2008). Abundances of cold-stenotherm species decreased whereas those of eurythermal species increased with increasing temperatures leading to knock-on effects on abundances of other species. Species community overlap between streams declined as temperature difference between streams increased. The persistence of species composition through time was weakened at the extremes of the temperature gradient. Food webs showed a clear size structuring in analyses of trivariate food webs, abundance and biomass size spectra. Analysis of connectance, complexity, mean link length, mean 2-span, mean community span and slopes and intercepts of linear regressions fitted to the trivariate foods or size spectra revealed the impact of temperature change on freshwater ecosystems. Thesis Iceland Queen Mary University of London: Queen Mary Research Online (QMRO) Hengill ENVELOPE(-21.306,-21.306,64.078,64.078)
institution Open Polar
collection Queen Mary University of London: Queen Mary Research Online (QMRO)
op_collection_id ftqueenmaryuniv
language English
topic Biology
Ecology
Climate change
Iceland
Freshwater ecosystems
spellingShingle Biology
Ecology
Climate change
Iceland
Freshwater ecosystems
Pichler, Doris Evelyn
Stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on Icelandic freshwaters.
topic_facet Biology
Ecology
Climate change
Iceland
Freshwater ecosystems
description PhD Climate change and the accompanying increase in global surface temperatures pose a major threat to freshwater ecosystems, especially at high latitudes where warming is predicted to be particularly rapid. To date many aspects of how rising temperatures can impact fresh waters remain unknown. Information about temperature effects on the level of communities, food webs, ecosystems is especially scarce. The few studies focusing on higher levels of organisation have used either laboratory microcosm experiments, which can lack realism or space-for-time substitution across large ranges of latitude, which can be confounded by bio-geographical effects. This study aimed to overcome these shortcomings by using a “natural experiment” in a set of 16 geothermally heated streams in the Hengill area, South-West Iceland, with water temperatures ranging from 4ºC to 49ºC (mean temperature). Data were analysed for two seasons, August 2008 and April 2009. The principal goal of this study was to assess the effects of temperature on the structure and functioning of food webs. Additionally the persistence of the community structures along the temperature gradient was examined through time (comparison of previously collected data in August 2004 and August 2008). Abundances of cold-stenotherm species decreased whereas those of eurythermal species increased with increasing temperatures leading to knock-on effects on abundances of other species. Species community overlap between streams declined as temperature difference between streams increased. The persistence of species composition through time was weakened at the extremes of the temperature gradient. Food webs showed a clear size structuring in analyses of trivariate food webs, abundance and biomass size spectra. Analysis of connectance, complexity, mean link length, mean 2-span, mean community span and slopes and intercepts of linear regressions fitted to the trivariate foods or size spectra revealed the impact of temperature change on freshwater ecosystems.
format Thesis
author Pichler, Doris Evelyn
author_facet Pichler, Doris Evelyn
author_sort Pichler, Doris Evelyn
title Stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on Icelandic freshwaters.
title_short Stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on Icelandic freshwaters.
title_full Stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on Icelandic freshwaters.
title_fullStr Stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on Icelandic freshwaters.
title_full_unstemmed Stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on Icelandic freshwaters.
title_sort stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on icelandic freshwaters.
publisher Queen Mary University of London
publishDate 2012
url http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/8604
long_lat ENVELOPE(-21.306,-21.306,64.078,64.078)
geographic Hengill
geographic_facet Hengill
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation Pichler, D.E. 2012. Stream food webs in a changing climate: the impacts of warming on Icelandic freshwaters. Queen Mary University of London.
http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/8604
op_rights The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without the prior written consent of the author
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