Response of macroinvertebrate communities to land use and water quality in Wudalianchi Lake.

Xue Du, Dan Song, Kun Ming, Xing Jin, Huibo Wang, Le Wang, Hui Liu, Chen Zhao, Tangbin Huo
Author Information
  1. Xue Du: Heilongjiang River Fishery Research Institute Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences Harbin China. ORCID
  2. Dan Song: Heilongjiang River Fishery Research Institute Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences Harbin China.
  3. Kun Ming: Harbin Management Station of the Forth Administration Bureau of Reserve assets The Joint Logistics Support Force of PLA Harbin China.
  4. Xing Jin: Heilongjiang River Fishery Research Institute Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences Harbin China.
  5. Huibo Wang: Heilongjiang River Fishery Research Institute Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences Harbin China.
  6. Le Wang: Heilongjiang River Fishery Research Institute Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences Harbin China.
  7. Hui Liu: Heilongjiang River Fishery Research Institute Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences Harbin China.
  8. Chen Zhao: Heilongjiang River Fishery Research Institute Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences Harbin China.
  9. Tangbin Huo: Heilongjiang River Fishery Research Institute Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences Harbin China.

Abstract

Macroinvertebrate assemblages are structured by a number of abiotic and biotic factors interacting simultaneously. We investigated macroinvertebrate assemblages along gradients of human disturbance and morphometric characteristics in five lakes connected by the same stream. We aimed to assess the relative effects of environmental gradients on macroinvertebrate assemblages and to investigate whether water quality effects on the assemblages were correlated with buffer land use. There were significant differences in macroinvertebrate community compositions among lakes, and our results indicated that oligochaetes (mainly s) and insects (mainly ) contributed highly to the differences. We used redundancy analysis with variation partitioning to quantify the independent and combined anthropogenic effects of water quality and land use gradients on the macroinvertebrate community. The independent effect of water quality was responsible for 17% of the total variance in macroinvertebrate community composition, the independent effect of buffer land use accounted for 6% of variation, and the combined variation between land use change and water quality accounted for 12%. Our study indicated that both the independent effects of land use and within-lake water quality can explain the influence in macroinvertebrate assemblages, with significant interactions between the two. This is rather important to notice that changes in buffer land use generally may alter nutrient inputs and thus severely affect abiotic conditions encountered by macroinvertebrate. Our study demonstrates that considering buffer zone effects explicitly may be significant in the selection and application of conservation and management strategies.

Keywords

Associated Data

Dryad | 10.5061/dryad.qnk98sff8

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Word Cloud

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