Effects of a major Amazonian river confluence on the distribution of floodplain forest avifauna
Aim Although ‘river color’ or water type is an important determinant of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity, the relevance of mixing distinct water types at river confluences to the distribution of terrestrial floodplain fauna has been largely overlooked. We investigated how the influx of a sediment‐r...
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Published in | Journal of biogeography Vol. 48; no. 4; pp. 847 - 860 |
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Main Authors | , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Oxford
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
01.04.2021
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Abstract | Aim
Although ‘river color’ or water type is an important determinant of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity, the relevance of mixing distinct water types at river confluences to the distribution of terrestrial floodplain fauna has been largely overlooked. We investigated how the influx of a sediment‐rich whitewater tributary affects the floodplain forest avifauna along the world's largest blackwater river.
Location
Northwestern Brazilian Amazon.
Taxon
Birds.
Methods
We sampled floodplain avifauna and retrieved estimates of sediment concentration in the water (the main parameter in river‐water classification) at 52 sites, along the Negro (blackwater) and Branco (whitewater) rivers, above and below their confluence. We compared species richness and composition using analyses of variance, ordinations, generalized linear models and indicator species analyses.
Results
Bird species composition on the lower Rio Negro (below the confluence) was distinct from both the upper Negro (above the confluence) and the Branco, and species richness on the Negro increased below the confluence. Typical whitewater bird species occurring on the Branco were found exclusively or predominantly along the left side of the lower Rio Negro, where the Branco's muddy waters seem to be channelled. Overall avian compositional variation among sites was correlated with sediment concentration in the water, a determinant of floodplain forest structure.
Main conclusions
The influx of the muddy waters of the Rio Branco into the Rio Negro promotes the co‐occurrence of bird species that are segregated by river type upstream, increasing species richness at the landscape scale. Rather than just representing a potential blackwater barrier between whitewater systems, the lower Rio Negro comprises a unique biogeographical transition zone, with a mixed avifauna occurring in a mosaic of varied floodplain forest types. Our results suggest that confluences of large rivers of distinct water types represent a significant factor determining species distributional boundaries and geographic patterns of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity. |
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AbstractList | AimAlthough ‘river color’ or water type is an important determinant of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity, the relevance of mixing distinct water types at river confluences to the distribution of terrestrial floodplain fauna has been largely overlooked. We investigated how the influx of a sediment‐rich whitewater tributary affects the floodplain forest avifauna along the world's largest blackwater river.LocationNorthwestern Brazilian Amazon.TaxonBirds.MethodsWe sampled floodplain avifauna and retrieved estimates of sediment concentration in the water (the main parameter in river‐water classification) at 52 sites, along the Negro (blackwater) and Branco (whitewater) rivers, above and below their confluence. We compared species richness and composition using analyses of variance, ordinations, generalized linear models and indicator species analyses.ResultsBird species composition on the lower Rio Negro (below the confluence) was distinct from both the upper Negro (above the confluence) and the Branco, and species richness on the Negro increased below the confluence. Typical whitewater bird species occurring on the Branco were found exclusively or predominantly along the left side of the lower Rio Negro, where the Branco's muddy waters seem to be channelled. Overall avian compositional variation among sites was correlated with sediment concentration in the water, a determinant of floodplain forest structure.Main conclusionsThe influx of the muddy waters of the Rio Branco into the Rio Negro promotes the co‐occurrence of bird species that are segregated by river type upstream, increasing species richness at the landscape scale. Rather than just representing a potential blackwater barrier between whitewater systems, the lower Rio Negro comprises a unique biogeographical transition zone, with a mixed avifauna occurring in a mosaic of varied floodplain forest types. Our results suggest that confluences of large rivers of distinct water types represent a significant factor determining species distributional boundaries and geographic patterns of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity. Aim Although ‘river color’ or water type is an important determinant of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity, the relevance of mixing distinct water types at river confluences to the distribution of terrestrial floodplain fauna has been largely overlooked. We investigated how the influx of a sediment‐rich whitewater tributary affects the floodplain forest avifauna along the world's largest blackwater river. Location Northwestern Brazilian Amazon. Taxon Birds. Methods We sampled floodplain avifauna and retrieved estimates of sediment concentration in the water (the main parameter in river‐water classification) at 52 sites, along the Negro (blackwater) and Branco (whitewater) rivers, above and below their confluence. We compared species richness and composition using analyses of variance, ordinations, generalized linear models and indicator species analyses. Results Bird species composition on the lower Rio Negro (below the confluence) was distinct from both the upper Negro (above the confluence) and the Branco, and species richness on the Negro increased below the confluence. Typical whitewater bird species occurring on the Branco were found exclusively or predominantly along the left side of the lower Rio Negro, where the Branco's muddy waters seem to be channelled. Overall avian compositional variation among sites was correlated with sediment concentration in the water, a determinant of floodplain forest structure. Main conclusions The influx of the muddy waters of the Rio Branco into the Rio Negro promotes the co‐occurrence of bird species that are segregated by river type upstream, increasing species richness at the landscape scale. Rather than just representing a potential blackwater barrier between whitewater systems, the lower Rio Negro comprises a unique biogeographical transition zone, with a mixed avifauna occurring in a mosaic of varied floodplain forest types. Our results suggest that confluences of large rivers of distinct water types represent a significant factor determining species distributional boundaries and geographic patterns of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity. AIM: Although ‘river color’ or water type is an important determinant of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity, the relevance of mixing distinct water types at river confluences to the distribution of terrestrial floodplain fauna has been largely overlooked. We investigated how the influx of a sediment‐rich whitewater tributary affects the floodplain forest avifauna along the world's largest blackwater river. LOCATION: Northwestern Brazilian Amazon. TAXON: Birds. METHODS: We sampled floodplain avifauna and retrieved estimates of sediment concentration in the water (the main parameter in river‐water classification) at 52 sites, along the Negro (blackwater) and Branco (whitewater) rivers, above and below their confluence. We compared species richness and composition using analyses of variance, ordinations, generalized linear models and indicator species analyses. RESULTS: Bird species composition on the lower Rio Negro (below the confluence) was distinct from both the upper Negro (above the confluence) and the Branco, and species richness on the Negro increased below the confluence. Typical whitewater bird species occurring on the Branco were found exclusively or predominantly along the left side of the lower Rio Negro, where the Branco's muddy waters seem to be channelled. Overall avian compositional variation among sites was correlated with sediment concentration in the water, a determinant of floodplain forest structure. MAIN CONCLUSIONS: The influx of the muddy waters of the Rio Branco into the Rio Negro promotes the co‐occurrence of bird species that are segregated by river type upstream, increasing species richness at the landscape scale. Rather than just representing a potential blackwater barrier between whitewater systems, the lower Rio Negro comprises a unique biogeographical transition zone, with a mixed avifauna occurring in a mosaic of varied floodplain forest types. Our results suggest that confluences of large rivers of distinct water types represent a significant factor determining species distributional boundaries and geographic patterns of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity. |
Author | Laranjeiras, Thiago Orsi Leite, Gabriel Augusto Cohn‐Haft, Mario Naka, Luciano Nicolas |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Thiago Orsi orcidid: 0000-0002-6997-3113 surname: Laranjeiras fullname: Laranjeiras, Thiago Orsi email: thiago.laranjeiras@icmbio.gov.br organization: Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade – sequence: 2 givenname: Luciano Nicolas orcidid: 0000-0002-7716-3401 surname: Naka fullname: Naka, Luciano Nicolas organization: Universidade Federal de Pernambuco (UFPE) – sequence: 3 givenname: Gabriel Augusto surname: Leite fullname: Leite, Gabriel Augusto organization: INPA – sequence: 4 givenname: Mario surname: Cohn‐Haft fullname: Cohn‐Haft, Mario organization: INPA |
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Although ‘river color’ or water type is an important determinant of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity, the relevance of mixing distinct water types at... AimAlthough ‘river color’ or water type is an important determinant of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity, the relevance of mixing distinct water types at river... AIM: Although ‘river color’ or water type is an important determinant of Amazonian floodplain biodiversity, the relevance of mixing distinct water types at... |
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SubjectTerms | African Americans Amazonia Avifauna Biodiversity biogeography Birds Brazilian Amazon Composition Floodplains fluvial islands Forests Generalized linear models geographical distribution Indicator species landscapes Rio Branco Rio Negro river color river water Rivers Sediment concentration sediment load Sediment transport sediments Species composition Species richness Statistical models Transition zone variance Variance analysis White water |
Title | Effects of a major Amazonian river confluence on the distribution of floodplain forest avifauna |
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