Water depth and land-use intensity indirectly determine phytoplankton functional diversity and further regulate resource use efficiency at a multi-lake scale

Biodiversity–ecosystem functioning relationships under multiple pressures have recently been the subject of broad studies. For the key primary producer in aquatic ecosystems, phytoplankton, several studies have focused on trait-based functional diversity (FD) and the related functioning (e.g., resou...

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Published inThe Science of the total environment Vol. 834; p. 155303
Main Authors Zhou, Qichao, Zhang, Yun, Tao, Juan, Ye, Lin, Wang, Haijun, Shan, Kun, Jeppesen, Erik, Song, Lirong
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 15.08.2022
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Summary:Biodiversity–ecosystem functioning relationships under multiple pressures have recently been the subject of broad studies. For the key primary producer in aquatic ecosystems, phytoplankton, several studies have focused on trait-based functional diversity (FD) and the related functioning (e.g., resource use efficiency, RUE), and their linkages. However, investigations of the effects of environmental factors at different levels (e.g., land use, lake morphometry, climate and nutrients) on FD and RUE are sparse. We developed a data-driven-model framework to simultaneously elucidate the effects of multiple drivers on FD (functional diversity based on dendrograms, FDc and functional richness, FRic) and RUE (of nitrogen and phosphorus) of phytoplankton based on data from 68 Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau lakes, Southwest China. We found that the concentration of total phosphorus, which is mainly affected by land-use intensity and influenced by water depth, was the primary (positive) driver of changes in both FDc and FRic, while RUE was mainly explained by phytoplankton FD (i.e., FRic). These results indicate that water depth and land-use intensity influence indirectly phytoplankton FD and further regulate RUE. Moreover, nonlinear correlations of RUE with FRic were found, which may be caused by interspecific competition and niche differentiation of the phytoplankton community related to nutrient levels. Our finding may help managers to set trade-off targets between FD and RUE in lake ecosystems except for extremely polluted ones, in which the thresholds derived from the Bayesian network, of total phosphorus, total nitrogen and land-use intensity were approximately 0.04 mg/L, 0.50 mg/L and 244 (unitless), respectively. The probability of meeting the RUE objectives was lower in shallow lakes than in deep lakes, but for FRic the opposite was observed. [Display omitted] •Data-driven methods were used to detect potential drivers of phytoplankton FD and RUE.•WD and LUI can impact FD and further regulate RUE by altering nutrient concentrations.•The relationships of both RUEN and RUEP with FRic are nonlinear at a regional scale.•The trade-off between diversity and functioning (RUE) is crucial for lake managements.
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ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.155303