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Supplementary information from Deforestation strengthens environmental filtering and competitive exclusion in Neotropical streams and rivers

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posted on 2023-08-26, 13:24 authored by Isabel Cantera, Céline Jézéquel, Tony Dejean, Jérôme Murienne, Régis Vigouroux, Alice Valentini, Sébastien Brosse
Understanding how anthropization impacts the assembly of species onto communities is pivotal to go beyond the observation of biodiversity changes and reveal how disturbances affect the environmental and biotic processes shaping biodiversity. Here, we propose a simple framework to measure the assembly processes underpinning functional convergence/divergence patterns. We apply this framework to Northern Amazonian fish communities inventoried using environmental DNA in 35 stream sites and 64 river sites. We found that the harsh and unstable environmental conditions characterizing streams convey communities towards functional convergence, by filter traits related to food acquisition and, to a lower extent, dispersal. Such environmental filtering also strengthens competition by excluding species having less competitive food acquisition traits. Instead, random species assembly was more marked in river communities, which may be explained by the downstream position of rivers facilitating the dispersion of species. Although fish assembly rules differed between streams and river fish communities, anthropogenic disturbances reduced functional divergence in both ecosystems, with a reinforcement of both environmental filtering and weaker competitor exclusion. This may explain the substantial biodiversity alterations observed under slight deforestation levels and underlines the vulnerability of Neotropical freshwater ecosystems to anthropic disturbances that not only affect species persistence but also modify community assembly rules.

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    Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

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