Artículo
Hydrological Conditions and Climatic Factors Shape Waterbird Functional Diversity in a Ramsar Site of Argentina
Fecha de publicación:
05/2025
Editorial:
John Wiley & Sons
Revista:
Ecohydrology
ISSN:
1936-0584
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
With global biodiversity in decline, functional biodiversity metrics help link biodiversity changes to ecosystem functioning.In wetlands, extreme events like droughts and floods challenge waterbirds, affecting survival and reproduction. At Pampeanlakes in Argentina, hydrological fluctuations are significant. We examined how waterbird functional diversity responds to thesechanges at the Melincué Ramsar Site, considering seasonality and whether environmental filtering or competition shapes communitystructure. Using waterbird counts from 1992 to 2019, we calculated functional richness, evenness, divergence and dispersionbased on species traits. We employed general linear models and beta distance to assess relationships between functionaldiversity indices and hydrological variables, and explore assembly patterns. We recorded 71 waterbird species. Functional richnessdecreased by nearly 26% in drier years, indicating a loss of trait diversity under reduced hydrological conditions. Evennesscorrelated positively with precipitation and negatively with lake area, peaking at intermediate Standardized Precipitation-EvapotranspirationIndex over a 12-monthperiod (SPEI 12) values. Divergence increased with precipitation but was lowest atintermediate SPEI 12 values and highest in summer. Dispersion peaked at intermediate lake areas, increasing with summerprecipitation but decreasing with winter precipitation. Trait-convergenceassembly patterns (TCAP) analysis showed communitystructure significantly changed with lake area, was marginally significant for SPEI 12 and not significant for precipitation.Maximum functional diversity occurred when the lake was neither too high nor too low and seasonality influenced functionaldiversity responses. These results highlight environmental filtering as the primary driver of waterbird assembly over time andunderscore the need to incorporate hydrological dynamics into wetland conservation planning.
Palabras clave:
functional diversity
,
global change
,
hydrology
,
waterbirds
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Articulos(IICAR)
Articulos de INST. DE INVESTIGACIONES EN CIENCIAS AGRARIAS DE ROSARIO
Articulos de INST. DE INVESTIGACIONES EN CIENCIAS AGRARIAS DE ROSARIO
Citación
Asmus, Jorgelina Pamela; Romano, Marcelo; Barberis, Ignacio Martín; Hydrological Conditions and Climatic Factors Shape Waterbird Functional Diversity in a Ramsar Site of Argentina; John Wiley & Sons; Ecohydrology; 18; 3; 5-2025; 1-12
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