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Altitudinal distribution limits of aquatic macroinvertebrates: an experimental test in a tropical alpine stream
Author(s) -
MADSEN PHILIP B.,
MORABOWEN ANDRÉS,
ANDINO PATRICIO,
ESPINOSA RODRIGO,
CAUVYFRAUNIÉ SOPHIE,
DANGLES OLIVIER,
JACOBSEN DEAN
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
ecological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.865
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1365-2311
pISSN - 0307-6946
DOI - 10.1111/een.12232
Subject(s) - biology , invertebrate , taxon , ecology , benthic zone , altitude (triangle) , population , demography , mathematics , geometry , sociology
1. Temperature and oxygen are recognised as the main drivers of altitudinal limits of species distributions. However, the two factors are linked, and both decrease with altitude, why their effects are difficult to disentangle. 2. This was experimentally addressed using aquatic macroinvertebrates; larvae of Andesiops ( E phemeroptera), Claudioperla , ( P lecoptera), S cirtes ( C oleoptera) and Anomalocosmoecus ( T richoptera), and the amphipod H yalella in an E cuadorian glacier‐fed stream (4100–4500 m a.s.l.). The following were performed: (i) quantitative benthic sampling at three sites to determine altitudinal patterns in population densities, (ii) transplants of the five taxa upstream of their natural altitudinal limit to test the short‐term (14 days) effect on survival, and (iii) in situ experiments of locomotory activity as a proxy for animal response to relatively small differences in temperature (5 °C vs. 10 °C) and oxygen saturation (55% vs. 62%). 3. The transplant experiment reduced survival to a varying degree among taxa, but C laudioperla survived well at a site where it did not naturally occur. In the in situ experiment, S cirtes and H yalella decreased their activity at lower oxygen saturation, whereas A ndesiops and A nomalocosmoecus did so at a low temperature. The decrease in activity from a high to a low temperature and oxygen for the five taxa was significantly correlated with their mortality in the transplant experiment. 4. Together the present experiments indicate that even relatively small differences in temperature and oxygen may produce effects explaining ecological patterns, and depending on the taxon, either water temperature or oxygen saturation, without clear interacting effects, are important drivers of altitudinal limits.

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