Litcius/Paper detail

Drainage‐induced browning causes both loss and change of benthic biodiversity in headwater streams

Joanna Brüsecke, Timo Muotka, Kaisa‐Leena Huttunen, Sanni Litjo, Wille‐Pekka Lepo, Jussi Jyväsjärvi

2022Limnology and Oceanography Letters14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Concentrations of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) have increased over the past few decades, causing freshwater browning. Impacts of browning on biodiversity have been little studied, despite many of the individual stressors associated with browning being known to control freshwater communities. We explored the responses of benthic invertebrates along a wide gradient of DOC concentrations (3.6–27 mg L −1 ) in 63 boreal streams variously impacted by peatland drainage or peat production. DOC was a prime determinant of macroinvertebrate diversity and abundance, with the strongest negative response in algal scrapers. Threshold indicator taxa analysis indicated an abrupt community change at 12–13 mg DOC L −1 , with only four taxa increasing, while 13 taxa decreased along the gradient. Our findings of both a gradual loss and abrupt change of biodiversity along a browning gradient provide a benchmark against which changes to stream biodiversity relative to the predicted browning trend can be gauged.

Topics & Concepts

BiodiversityBenthic zonePeatEcologyInvertebrateBrowningSTREAMSEnvironmental scienceBorealDissolved organic carbonBiologyHorticultureComputer scienceComputer networkSoil and Water Nutrient DynamicsFish Ecology and Management StudiesFreshwater macroinvertebrate diversity and ecology