Metabolic dependence of phytoplankton species richness

Aim: To analyse the dependence of phytoplankton species richness on temperature within the framework of the metabolic theory of ecology (MTE) with explicit consideration of its assumptions and predictions. Location: Lakes from the Southern Hemisphere - South America (Argentinean Pampa to Tierra del...

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Main Authors: Segura, A.M., Calliari, D., Kruk, C., Fort, H., Izaguirre, I., Saad, J.F., Arim, M.
Format: Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1466822X_v24_n4_p472_Segura
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spelling ftunibueairesbd:todo:paper_1466822X_v24_n4_p472_Segura 2023-10-29T02:31:53+01:00 Metabolic dependence of phytoplankton species richness Segura, A.M. Calliari, D. Kruk, C. Fort, H. Izaguirre, I. Saad, J.F. Arim, M. https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1466822X_v24_n4_p472_Segura unknown http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1466822X_v24_n4_p472_Segura info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar America Antarctica Europe Lakes Metabolic theory of ecology Phytoplankton biodiversity biodiversity body size growth rate lake ecosystem phytoplankton relative abundance species richness temperature effect Argentina Denmark Spain Tierra del Fuego [(PRV) Argentina] United States JOUR ftunibueairesbd https://doi.org/20.500.12110/paper_1466822X_v24_n4_p472_Segura 2023-10-05T01:11:01Z Aim: To analyse the dependence of phytoplankton species richness on temperature within the framework of the metabolic theory of ecology (MTE) with explicit consideration of its assumptions and predictions. Location: Lakes from the Southern Hemisphere - South America (Argentinean Pampa to Tierra del Fuego) and Antarctica - and Northern Hemisphere - North America (USA) and Europe (Denmark to Spain). Methods: The MTE proposes that natural logarithm of species richness and the inverse of temperature are linearly related, with a slope equal to the activation energy. The MTE assumes that the total community abundance, average body size and per species average community productivity are independent of the temperature. These predictions and assumptions are here evaluated using c. 660 phytoplankton lake communities and a literature review of 281 experimental measures of growth rate. Linear, curvilinear and segmented models were contrasted with empirical trends. Results: Temperature-richness relationships showed a three-phase segmented form in two of the three continents. Generally, at temperatures above 17°C and below 11°C there was a weak relationship or none. Intermediate temperatures showed the expected positive association with richness, but with steeper slopes (c. 1) than MTE expectations (c. 0.3). Statistical models including total community abundance and average body size explained up to 64% of the variance in richness. Main conclusions: In its original formulation the MTE is not a satisfactory model for large-scale richness patterns in phytoplankton. However, the MTE is able to better explain richness patterns when the temperature dependence of abundances and body size are explicitly accounted for in the model. These temperature dependences improve the performance of MTE predictions but question the interpretation of the richness-temperature slope as a measure of activation energy. The balance among activation energy, abundance and body size produced the observed segmented pattern in temperature-richness ... Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica Tierra del Fuego Biblioteca Digital FCEN-UBA (Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires)
institution Open Polar
collection Biblioteca Digital FCEN-UBA (Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires)
op_collection_id ftunibueairesbd
language unknown
topic America
Antarctica
Europe
Lakes
Metabolic theory of ecology
Phytoplankton biodiversity
biodiversity
body size
growth rate
lake ecosystem
phytoplankton
relative abundance
species richness
temperature effect
Argentina
Denmark
Spain
Tierra del Fuego [(PRV) Argentina]
United States
spellingShingle America
Antarctica
Europe
Lakes
Metabolic theory of ecology
Phytoplankton biodiversity
biodiversity
body size
growth rate
lake ecosystem
phytoplankton
relative abundance
species richness
temperature effect
Argentina
Denmark
Spain
Tierra del Fuego [(PRV) Argentina]
United States
Segura, A.M.
Calliari, D.
Kruk, C.
Fort, H.
Izaguirre, I.
Saad, J.F.
Arim, M.
Metabolic dependence of phytoplankton species richness
topic_facet America
Antarctica
Europe
Lakes
Metabolic theory of ecology
Phytoplankton biodiversity
biodiversity
body size
growth rate
lake ecosystem
phytoplankton
relative abundance
species richness
temperature effect
Argentina
Denmark
Spain
Tierra del Fuego [(PRV) Argentina]
United States
description Aim: To analyse the dependence of phytoplankton species richness on temperature within the framework of the metabolic theory of ecology (MTE) with explicit consideration of its assumptions and predictions. Location: Lakes from the Southern Hemisphere - South America (Argentinean Pampa to Tierra del Fuego) and Antarctica - and Northern Hemisphere - North America (USA) and Europe (Denmark to Spain). Methods: The MTE proposes that natural logarithm of species richness and the inverse of temperature are linearly related, with a slope equal to the activation energy. The MTE assumes that the total community abundance, average body size and per species average community productivity are independent of the temperature. These predictions and assumptions are here evaluated using c. 660 phytoplankton lake communities and a literature review of 281 experimental measures of growth rate. Linear, curvilinear and segmented models were contrasted with empirical trends. Results: Temperature-richness relationships showed a three-phase segmented form in two of the three continents. Generally, at temperatures above 17°C and below 11°C there was a weak relationship or none. Intermediate temperatures showed the expected positive association with richness, but with steeper slopes (c. 1) than MTE expectations (c. 0.3). Statistical models including total community abundance and average body size explained up to 64% of the variance in richness. Main conclusions: In its original formulation the MTE is not a satisfactory model for large-scale richness patterns in phytoplankton. However, the MTE is able to better explain richness patterns when the temperature dependence of abundances and body size are explicitly accounted for in the model. These temperature dependences improve the performance of MTE predictions but question the interpretation of the richness-temperature slope as a measure of activation energy. The balance among activation energy, abundance and body size produced the observed segmented pattern in temperature-richness ...
format Journal/Newspaper
author Segura, A.M.
Calliari, D.
Kruk, C.
Fort, H.
Izaguirre, I.
Saad, J.F.
Arim, M.
author_facet Segura, A.M.
Calliari, D.
Kruk, C.
Fort, H.
Izaguirre, I.
Saad, J.F.
Arim, M.
author_sort Segura, A.M.
title Metabolic dependence of phytoplankton species richness
title_short Metabolic dependence of phytoplankton species richness
title_full Metabolic dependence of phytoplankton species richness
title_fullStr Metabolic dependence of phytoplankton species richness
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic dependence of phytoplankton species richness
title_sort metabolic dependence of phytoplankton species richness
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1466822X_v24_n4_p472_Segura
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Tierra del Fuego
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Tierra del Fuego
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1466822X_v24_n4_p472_Segura
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.12110/paper_1466822X_v24_n4_p472_Segura
_version_ 1781052752774823936