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High temperature, predation, nutrient, and food quality drive dominance of small-sized zooplankton in Neotropical lakes. / das Candeias, Donisete Aparecido; Moi, Dieison André; Simões, Nadson Ressyé et al.
I: Aquatic Sciences, Bind 84, Nr. 4, 49, 10.2022.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift/Konferencebidrag i tidsskrift /Bidrag til avis › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › peer review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - High temperature, predation, nutrient, and food quality drive dominance of small-sized zooplankton in Neotropical lakes
AU - das Candeias, Donisete Aparecido
AU - Moi, Dieison André
AU - Simões, Nadson Ressyé
AU - Azevedo, Fábio
AU - Meerhoff, Mariana
AU - Bonecker, Claudia Costa
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
PY - 2022/10
Y1 - 2022/10
N2 - Body size plays a key role in the functioning of communities and ecosystems. However, this ecological trait is commonly under strong selection pressure by environmental drivers, such as temperature, nutrients, predation, and food quality. Understanding how environmental factors interact to shape the body size structure of communities is, therefore, of fundamental and applied interest. Using a unique database from 12 Neotropical lakes, we quantified the community-weighted mean trait (CWM) of zooplankton body size. We investigated how temperature, total phosphorus, abundance of predators (planktivorous fish) and food availability (abundance of edible and inedible algae) affect CWM of zooplankton body size. We also analyzed the interactions among these environmental predictors, and their cascading effects on zooplankton body size. We found that planktivorous fish, inedible algae, and edible algae had strong direct impacts on CWM of zooplankton body size. In particular, planktivorous fish and inedible algae decreased the CWM of body size, whereas edible algae increased it. Temperature and total phosphorus indirectly affected CWM of body size by increasing the abundance of planktivorous fish and inedible algae, and decreasing the abundance of edible algae. Our findings illustrate that environmental factors act in combination and affect zooplankton body size through multiple pathways. Therefore, focusing on the interaction between environmental predictors rather than just their isolated effects may provide a more mechanistic understanding of how environmental changes drive the body size structure of biotic communities.
AB - Body size plays a key role in the functioning of communities and ecosystems. However, this ecological trait is commonly under strong selection pressure by environmental drivers, such as temperature, nutrients, predation, and food quality. Understanding how environmental factors interact to shape the body size structure of communities is, therefore, of fundamental and applied interest. Using a unique database from 12 Neotropical lakes, we quantified the community-weighted mean trait (CWM) of zooplankton body size. We investigated how temperature, total phosphorus, abundance of predators (planktivorous fish) and food availability (abundance of edible and inedible algae) affect CWM of zooplankton body size. We also analyzed the interactions among these environmental predictors, and their cascading effects on zooplankton body size. We found that planktivorous fish, inedible algae, and edible algae had strong direct impacts on CWM of zooplankton body size. In particular, planktivorous fish and inedible algae decreased the CWM of body size, whereas edible algae increased it. Temperature and total phosphorus indirectly affected CWM of body size by increasing the abundance of planktivorous fish and inedible algae, and decreasing the abundance of edible algae. Our findings illustrate that environmental factors act in combination and affect zooplankton body size through multiple pathways. Therefore, focusing on the interaction between environmental predictors rather than just their isolated effects may provide a more mechanistic understanding of how environmental changes drive the body size structure of biotic communities.
KW - Body size
KW - Bottom-up
KW - Climate warming
KW - Top-down
KW - Traits
KW - Zooplankton
U2 - 10.1007/s00027-022-00881-4
DO - 10.1007/s00027-022-00881-4
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85135626012
VL - 84
JO - Aquatic Sciences
JF - Aquatic Sciences
SN - 1015-1621
IS - 4
M1 - 49
ER -