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- Title
Land use types determine environmental heterogeneity and aquatic insect diversity in Amazonian streams.
- Authors
Faria, Ana Paula Justino; Ligeiro, Raphael; Calvão, Lenize B.; Giam, Xingli; Leibold, Mathew A.; Juen, Leandro
- Abstract
The Amazon forests are under threat from multiple human land uses, but the effect of the different types of land uses on environmental heterogeneity and the α- and β-diversity of aquatic insects remains unclear. We studied how habitat features of streams and aquatic insect diversity in the orders Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera (hereafter, EPT) responded to different land uses in the Brazilian Amazon. By sampling and analyzing EPT community data from 83 streams distributed in multiple land uses and land covers, we found that the impact of forest conversion was mixed. Despite contiguous and fragmented forest streams presenting similar environmental conditions, they differed in insect diversity metrics. α-diversity was highest in contiguous forest streams and EPT β-diversity was higher in streams surrounded by livestock farming and primary oil palm plantations. The association between land use and habitat degradation may not be so direct, mainly when streams are inserted into or surrounded by forest fragments. This has important implications because politicians and policymakers often regard forest fragments as degraded landscapes, to justify their conversion to other land uses. Our study shows that forest fragments must be protected and restored to reduce the risks of degrading the ecological condition of Amazonian streams.
- Subjects
AMAZON River Region; INSECT diversity; AQUATIC insects; LAND use; FOREST conversion; LAND cover; AQUATIC invertebrates; INSECTS
- Publication
Hydrobiologia, 2024, Vol 851, Issue 2, p281
- ISSN
0018-8158
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1007/s10750-023-05190-x