Article

Impacts of space, local environment and habitat connectivity on macrophyte communities in conservation lakes

Details

Citation

O’Hare MT, Gunn I, Chapman DS, Dudley BJ & Purse BV (2012) Impacts of space, local environment and habitat connectivity on macrophyte communities in conservation lakes. Diversity and Distributions, 18 (6), pp. 603-614. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1472-4642.2011.00860.x

Abstract
Aim  To assess the relative impacts of spatial, local environmental and habitat connectivity on the structure of aquatic macrophyte communities in lakes designated for their conservation value. Location  Selected lakes of conservation importance all over Scotland, representing a wide variety of lake habitat types and associated macrophyte communities. Methods  Local environmental variables and species occurrence were measured in the field. Spatial variables were generated using principal coordinates of neighbour matrices (PCNM) analysis. Connectivity between each lake and its neighbours was defined as either (i) all lakes within a radius of 5, 10, 25, 50, 75 or 100?km; (ii) all lakes in same river system; or (iii) all lakes in the same catchment and upstream of the lake. Using variance partitioning within canonical correspondence analysis, the relative impact of E?=?local environment, S?=?space and C?=?lake connectivity was compared on submerged (n?=?119 lakes) and emergent (n?=?96 lakes) macrophyte assemblages. Results  Local environmental conditions, such as total phosphorus, alkalinity/conductivity and the presence of invasive species, as well as spatial gradients were key drivers of observed variation in macrophyte communities; e.g., for submerged macrophytes, a combination of local to moderate factors relating to water chemistry and broad-scale gradients reflecting elevation and climate are important. Spatially structured environmental variables explained a large portion of observed variation. Main conclusions  Our findings confirmed the need to manage local environmental pressures such as eutrophication, but suggested that the traditional catchment approach was insufficient. The spatial aggregation of environmental and connectivity factors indicated that a landscape scale approach should be used in lake management to augment the risk assessment to conservation species from the deterioration of suitable lake sites over broad biogeographic areas.

Keywords
Connectivity; conservation; eutrophication; hydrophytes; lakes; landscape; space

Journal
Diversity and Distributions: Volume 18, Issue 6

StatusPublished
FundersNatural Environment Research Council
Publication date30/06/2012
Publication date online10/11/2011
Date accepted by journal10/11/2011
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/29059
PublisherJohn Wiley & Sons, Ltd (10.1111)
ISSN1366-9516
eISSN1472-4642

People (1)

Dr Daniel Chapman

Dr Daniel Chapman

Senior Lecturer, Biological and Environmental Sciences