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Influence of past and current factors on the beta diversity of coastal lagoon fish communities in South America
Author(s) -
Guimarães Taís de Fátima Ramos,
Petry Ana Cristina,
Hartz Sandra Maria,
Becker Fernando Gertum
Publication year - 2021
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.14029
Subject(s) - beta diversity , biological dispersal , ecology , habitat , geography , nestedness , species diversity , biology , population , demography , sociology
Aim Fish community composition is shaped by current and historical factors. In recently formed ecosystems, however, as the Quaternary coastal lagoons of South America, the influence of historical factors has less frequently been investigated. The low rate of endemism in these lagoons suggests a limited role for speciation while their dynamic formation history suggests local extinction and dispersal limitation could have affected present species composition. We aimed to assess the influence of past and current factors on the beta diversity of those communities and explore the main processes involved. Location Atlantic coast of South America. Taxon Fishes (173 species). Methods We built a dataset of species occurrence in 129 lagoons across eight freshwater ecoregions of the world (FEOWs) located between latitudes 0° and 36°, and calculated beta diversity ( β jac ) and its turnover ( β jtu ) and nestedness ( β jne ) components. We used a partial Mantel test and multiple regressions on distance matrices to evaluate the importance of past and current factors, and of geographical distance in determining beta diversity. Past variables were those representing the historical freshwater habitat during the last glacial maximum (LGM), and contemporary variables were those related to current habitat. Results We found high values of β jac within the FEOWs, with β jtu prevailing over β jne . Both past (palaeodrainage) and current (drainage area, salinity and lagoon area) factors affected species dissimilarity ( β jac  = 46%) and its components ( β jtu  = 44% and β jne  = 20%), although explanation was, in part, shared with geographical distance. Individually, the influence of past factors was prevalent in beta diversity and its components. Main conclusions The large influence of the past factors on beta diversity suggests that major changes in the availability of freshwater habitats and connectivity since the Pleistocene must have affected the colonization, extinction and recolonization processes of fishes along the eastern coast of South America. We suggest that the high beta diversity values result from limited dispersal after extinctions in the LGM. The dissimilar freshwater fish communities currently seen result from heterogeneous subsets of the regional species pool that persisted in landscape refuges during past sea level increases and then recolonized coastal lagoons.

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