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Diversity gradients of Neotropical freshwater fish: evidence of multiple underlying factors in human‐modified systems
Author(s) -
Bailly Dayani,
Cassemiro Fernanda A. S.,
Winemiller Kirk O.,
DinizFilho José Alexandre F.,
Agostinho Angelo A.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of biogeography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.7
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1365-2699
pISSN - 0305-0270
DOI - 10.1111/jbi.12749
Subject(s) - species richness , ecology , macroecology , spatial ecology , abundance (ecology) , habitat , spatial analysis , population , biology , relative species abundance , spatial heterogeneity , species diversity , geography , remote sensing , demography , sociology
Abstract Aim Contemporary patterns of species diversity are the result of a hierarchy of natural processes and modern anthropogenic influences. However, studies of these patterns in human‐modified systems from a macroecological perspective are lacking. Considering that fish assemblages in reservoirs reflect both long‐term evolutionary responses of species and shorter term responses to anthropogenic stressors, we employed a multi‐hypothesis approach using different magnitudes of predictors to analyse the processes that drive fish diversity in reservoirs at a broad spatial scale. Location Brazil. Methods We derived species richness from an extensive database of fish inhabiting Neotropical reservoirs, and using multiple regression analysis, we tested seven hypotheses that link species richness to continuous variables associated with regional, local and population components. We analysed the spatial structure using Moran's I autocorrelation coefficients and used spatial eigenvector mapping to explicitly account for the spatial component when testing the hypotheses by multiple regressions. Partial regressions were performed to map the relative contributions of the different components in explaining species richness. Results Predictors related to six hypotheses were retained in the best‐fit models, and our data supported the species–energy, metabolic, species–area, species–distance from the source and time of habitat alteration hypotheses. However, the predictions of the population abundance hypothesis (PAH) were not supported by the data. The shared effects of the different components explained the greatest proportion of the variation in species richness, indicating that distinct mechanisms related to these alternative hypotheses interact or are not spatially independent. Main conclusions Our findings indicate that the latitudinal diversity gradient typically displayed by freshwater fish is maintained in human‐modified habitats, such as reservoirs, and that multiple mechanisms drive fish diversity in reservoirs over large spatial scales. The lack of support for the PAH implies that mechanisms structuring diversity patterns can be influenced by anthropogenic stressors.