Aquatic biota and the detection of climate change: Are there consistent aquatic ecotones?

In this study, we analyse the cumulative rate of compositional change along an altitudinal gradient in the Swiss Alps for three different groups of aquatic organisms - Cladocera, chironomids, and diatoms. In particular, we are interested in the magnitude of unusually large changes in species composi...

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Main Authors: Heegaard, E, Lotter, AF, Birks, HJB
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: SPRINGER 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/157416/
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author Heegaard, E
Lotter, AF
Birks, HJB
author_facet Heegaard, E
Lotter, AF
Birks, HJB
author_sort Heegaard, E
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
description In this study, we analyse the cumulative rate of compositional change along an altitudinal gradient in the Swiss Alps for three different groups of aquatic organisms - Cladocera, chironomids, and diatoms. In particular, we are interested in the magnitude of unusually large changes in species composition that allows the detection of critical ecotones for each of these three organism groups. The estimated rate-of-change is the distance in ordination space using principal coordinate analysis based on chord distance and chi-square distance. These analyses highlight the cumulative rate-of-change and the cumulative relative rate-of-change, as the chi-square distance is relative to the total species composition. We found that the major changes in taxonomic composition for the three organism groups and therefore also the major ecotones are just below the modern tree-line (1900-2000 m a.s.l.), which may indirectly be an effect of the tree-line. For diatoms and Cladocera (only chi-square distance) there is also an ecotone at 2055 m a.s.l., which may be a direct or indirect response to climate. Further, the ecotone region below the modern tree-line is much wider for chironomids, with an extension downwards due to a shift in relative abundance patterns. For diatoms there is a stronger rate-of-change above 1650 m a.s.l. when chi-square distance is used. Coupled with the even distribution of diatom richness, this suggests that at higher altitudes the change is more strongly associated with a few species becoming dominant compared to lower elevations. Hence, there are considerable differences among the three organism groups, suggesting that different environmental factors may influence the rates of compositional change within and among groups. This supports the general usefulness of multi-proxy studies, namely the study of several independent groups of organisms to reconstruct past environmental conditions but also points to the importance of careful site selection in such studies.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Fennoscandia
Northwest Territories
genre_facet Fennoscandia
Northwest Territories
geographic Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
id ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:157416
institution Open Polar
language unknown
op_collection_id ftucl
op_source J PALEOLIMNOL , 35 (3) 507 - 518. (2006)
publishDate 2006
publisher SPRINGER
record_format openpolar
spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:157416 2025-01-16T21:51:15+00:00 Aquatic biota and the detection of climate change: Are there consistent aquatic ecotones? Heegaard, E Lotter, AF Birks, HJB 2006-04 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/157416/ unknown SPRINGER J PALEOLIMNOL , 35 (3) 507 - 518. (2006) altitude beta-diveristy chironomids Cladocera diatoms multi-proxy studies palaeoclimatology reconstructing climate PAST ENVIRONMENTAL-CONDITIONS CHRYSOPHYTE CYST ASSEMBLAGES MEASURING BETA-DIVERSITY PRESENCE-ABSENCE DATA FRESH-WATER DIATOMS QUANTITATIVE INDICATORS CHIRONOMID ASSEMBLAGES NORTHERN FENNOSCANDIA NORTHWEST-TERRITORIES YOUNGER DRYAS Article 2006 ftucl 2016-01-21T23:14:03Z In this study, we analyse the cumulative rate of compositional change along an altitudinal gradient in the Swiss Alps for three different groups of aquatic organisms - Cladocera, chironomids, and diatoms. In particular, we are interested in the magnitude of unusually large changes in species composition that allows the detection of critical ecotones for each of these three organism groups. The estimated rate-of-change is the distance in ordination space using principal coordinate analysis based on chord distance and chi-square distance. These analyses highlight the cumulative rate-of-change and the cumulative relative rate-of-change, as the chi-square distance is relative to the total species composition. We found that the major changes in taxonomic composition for the three organism groups and therefore also the major ecotones are just below the modern tree-line (1900-2000 m a.s.l.), which may indirectly be an effect of the tree-line. For diatoms and Cladocera (only chi-square distance) there is also an ecotone at 2055 m a.s.l., which may be a direct or indirect response to climate. Further, the ecotone region below the modern tree-line is much wider for chironomids, with an extension downwards due to a shift in relative abundance patterns. For diatoms there is a stronger rate-of-change above 1650 m a.s.l. when chi-square distance is used. Coupled with the even distribution of diatom richness, this suggests that at higher altitudes the change is more strongly associated with a few species becoming dominant compared to lower elevations. Hence, there are considerable differences among the three organism groups, suggesting that different environmental factors may influence the rates of compositional change within and among groups. This supports the general usefulness of multi-proxy studies, namely the study of several independent groups of organisms to reconstruct past environmental conditions but also points to the importance of careful site selection in such studies. Article in Journal/Newspaper Fennoscandia Northwest Territories University College London: UCL Discovery Northwest Territories
spellingShingle altitude
beta-diveristy
chironomids
Cladocera
diatoms
multi-proxy studies
palaeoclimatology
reconstructing climate
PAST ENVIRONMENTAL-CONDITIONS
CHRYSOPHYTE CYST ASSEMBLAGES
MEASURING BETA-DIVERSITY
PRESENCE-ABSENCE DATA
FRESH-WATER DIATOMS
QUANTITATIVE INDICATORS
CHIRONOMID ASSEMBLAGES
NORTHERN FENNOSCANDIA
NORTHWEST-TERRITORIES
YOUNGER DRYAS
Heegaard, E
Lotter, AF
Birks, HJB
Aquatic biota and the detection of climate change: Are there consistent aquatic ecotones?
title Aquatic biota and the detection of climate change: Are there consistent aquatic ecotones?
title_full Aquatic biota and the detection of climate change: Are there consistent aquatic ecotones?
title_fullStr Aquatic biota and the detection of climate change: Are there consistent aquatic ecotones?
title_full_unstemmed Aquatic biota and the detection of climate change: Are there consistent aquatic ecotones?
title_short Aquatic biota and the detection of climate change: Are there consistent aquatic ecotones?
title_sort aquatic biota and the detection of climate change: are there consistent aquatic ecotones?
topic altitude
beta-diveristy
chironomids
Cladocera
diatoms
multi-proxy studies
palaeoclimatology
reconstructing climate
PAST ENVIRONMENTAL-CONDITIONS
CHRYSOPHYTE CYST ASSEMBLAGES
MEASURING BETA-DIVERSITY
PRESENCE-ABSENCE DATA
FRESH-WATER DIATOMS
QUANTITATIVE INDICATORS
CHIRONOMID ASSEMBLAGES
NORTHERN FENNOSCANDIA
NORTHWEST-TERRITORIES
YOUNGER DRYAS
topic_facet altitude
beta-diveristy
chironomids
Cladocera
diatoms
multi-proxy studies
palaeoclimatology
reconstructing climate
PAST ENVIRONMENTAL-CONDITIONS
CHRYSOPHYTE CYST ASSEMBLAGES
MEASURING BETA-DIVERSITY
PRESENCE-ABSENCE DATA
FRESH-WATER DIATOMS
QUANTITATIVE INDICATORS
CHIRONOMID ASSEMBLAGES
NORTHERN FENNOSCANDIA
NORTHWEST-TERRITORIES
YOUNGER DRYAS
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/157416/