Macroinvertebrate traits in Arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate

Introduction: Arctic freshwater ecosystems are undergoing rapid environmental transformation because of climate change, which is predicted to produce fundamental alterations in river community structure and function.Methods: We explored how climate change affects benthic invertebrate communities of...

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Main Authors: Lento, Jennifer, Lau, Danny C P, Brittain, John E., Culp, Joseph M., Goedkoop, Willem
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Swedish
English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/31594/
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author Lento, Jennifer
Lau, Danny C P
Brittain, John E.
Culp, Joseph M.
Goedkoop, Willem
author_facet Lento, Jennifer
Lau, Danny C P
Brittain, John E.
Culp, Joseph M.
Goedkoop, Willem
author_sort Lento, Jennifer
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
description Introduction: Arctic freshwater ecosystems are undergoing rapid environmental transformation because of climate change, which is predicted to produce fundamental alterations in river community structure and function.Methods: We explored how climate change affects benthic invertebrate communities of Arctic streams by examining patterns of their biological traits along latitudinal and climatic gradients in eastern North America (Canada) and northwestern Europe (Sweden, Norway).Results: Despite differences in taxonomic composition between continents, we identified similarities in the functional trait niche (FTN) of predominant macroinvertebrate taxonomic groups. Trait composition differed by latitude in eastern Canada, with a predominance of cold-tolerant taxa, tubular body shape, and cased and attached habits at the highest latitudes. Differences in trait composition were evident among ecoregions in Europe, with trait dominance at the highest latitudes that was comparable to North America. There was a similar increase in the relative abundance of cold tolerance and tubular body shape and a decrease in obligate shredders and trait richness with decreasing temperatures across both continents.Discussion: These patterns are indicative of FTNs that include physiological traits and habits that are advantageous for the low temperatures, short ice-free period, and low riparian vegetation cover at the highest latitudes. We predict that climate change will lead to an increase in functional diversity at high latitudes, as organisms with trait modalities that are currently only found at lower latitudes move northward. However, this change in trait composition will be mediated by the effect of spatial connectivity on dispersal ability, with slower change occurring on Arctic islands. These findings can support modelling of future change in Arctic freshwater assemblages in response to ongoing climate change.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Arctic
Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Climate change
geographic Arctic
Canada
Norway
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Norway
id ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:31594
institution Open Polar
language Swedish
English
op_collection_id ftslunivuppsala
op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/31594/1/lento-j-et-al-20230822.pdf
Lento, Jennifer and Lau, Danny C P and Brittain, John E. and Culp, Joseph M. and Goedkoop, Willem (2023). Macroinvertebrate traits in Arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 11 , 1209612 [Research article]
publishDate 2023
record_format openpolar
spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:31594 2025-04-27T14:21:57+00:00 Macroinvertebrate traits in Arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate Lento, Jennifer Lau, Danny C P Brittain, John E. Culp, Joseph M. Goedkoop, Willem 2023 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/31594/ sv eng swe eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/31594/1/lento-j-et-al-20230822.pdf Lento, Jennifer and Lau, Danny C P and Brittain, John E. and Culp, Joseph M. and Goedkoop, Willem (2023). Macroinvertebrate traits in Arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 11 , 1209612 [Research article] Ecology Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507) Research article NonPeerReviewed 2023 ftslunivuppsala 2025-03-28T11:17:59Z Introduction: Arctic freshwater ecosystems are undergoing rapid environmental transformation because of climate change, which is predicted to produce fundamental alterations in river community structure and function.Methods: We explored how climate change affects benthic invertebrate communities of Arctic streams by examining patterns of their biological traits along latitudinal and climatic gradients in eastern North America (Canada) and northwestern Europe (Sweden, Norway).Results: Despite differences in taxonomic composition between continents, we identified similarities in the functional trait niche (FTN) of predominant macroinvertebrate taxonomic groups. Trait composition differed by latitude in eastern Canada, with a predominance of cold-tolerant taxa, tubular body shape, and cased and attached habits at the highest latitudes. Differences in trait composition were evident among ecoregions in Europe, with trait dominance at the highest latitudes that was comparable to North America. There was a similar increase in the relative abundance of cold tolerance and tubular body shape and a decrease in obligate shredders and trait richness with decreasing temperatures across both continents.Discussion: These patterns are indicative of FTNs that include physiological traits and habits that are advantageous for the low temperatures, short ice-free period, and low riparian vegetation cover at the highest latitudes. We predict that climate change will lead to an increase in functional diversity at high latitudes, as organisms with trait modalities that are currently only found at lower latitudes move northward. However, this change in trait composition will be mediated by the effect of spatial connectivity on dispersal ability, with slower change occurring on Arctic islands. These findings can support modelling of future change in Arctic freshwater assemblages in response to ongoing climate change. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Climate change Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive Arctic Canada Norway
spellingShingle Ecology
Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507)
Lento, Jennifer
Lau, Danny C P
Brittain, John E.
Culp, Joseph M.
Goedkoop, Willem
Macroinvertebrate traits in Arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate
title Macroinvertebrate traits in Arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate
title_full Macroinvertebrate traits in Arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate
title_fullStr Macroinvertebrate traits in Arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate
title_full_unstemmed Macroinvertebrate traits in Arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate
title_short Macroinvertebrate traits in Arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate
title_sort macroinvertebrate traits in arctic streams reveal latitudinal patterns in physiology and habits that are strongly linked to climate
topic Ecology
Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507)
topic_facet Ecology
Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507)
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/31594/