2017
DOI: 10.1111/jbi.12978
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Global variation in the beta diversity of lake macrophytes is driven by environmental heterogeneity rather than latitude

Abstract: Aim\ud \ud We studied global variation in beta diversity patterns of lake macrophytes using regional data from across the world. Specifically, we examined (1) how beta diversity of aquatic macrophytes is partitioned between species turnover and nestedness within each study region, and (2) which environmental characteristics structure variation in these beta diversity components.\ud Location\ud \ud Global.\ud Methods\ud \ud We used presence–absence data for aquatic macrophytes from 21 regions distributed around… Show more

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Cited by 141 publications
(144 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
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“…High alkalinity lakes are unquestionably more impacted by anthropogenic pressures than their LA counterparts, being on average 1.2 ecological status classes poorer in the UK based on Water Framework Directive assessments (Willby et al., ). However, the argument that this impact will increase turnover (Alahuhta et al., ) seems unlikely to apply to the HA lakes in our study; greater impact would be expected to increase nestedness relative to other lake types whereas we found the inverse pattern.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 72%
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“…High alkalinity lakes are unquestionably more impacted by anthropogenic pressures than their LA counterparts, being on average 1.2 ecological status classes poorer in the UK based on Water Framework Directive assessments (Willby et al., ). However, the argument that this impact will increase turnover (Alahuhta et al., ) seems unlikely to apply to the HA lakes in our study; greater impact would be expected to increase nestedness relative to other lake types whereas we found the inverse pattern.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 72%
“…Alahuhta et al. () also noted in their global study that nestedness tended to be highest where overall beta diversity was low. Nestedness in LA lakes might therefore be indicative of their more restrictive growing conditions, whereby less productive/poorly connected lakes of this type only contain a subset of the species pool of the more productive/well‐connected and therefore most species‐rich ones (Bender et al., ; Henriques‐Silva, Lindo, & Peres‐Neto, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
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“…Annual mean air temperature was used as a proxy for thermal energy availability for macrophytes, whereas annual temperature range represented variation in thermal energy availability and its annual distribution in study lakes in different parts of the world (Kosten et al 2009a; Alahuhta et al 2017a). Annual precipitation was not only a surrogate for water-level fluctuation (incl.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, there has been a major effort to improve understanding of the drivers of biogeographical distributions and diversity of freshwater macrophyte species, some (but by no means all) of which have broad planetary distributions (e.g. Alahuhta et al., ; Bornette, Amoros, & Lamouroux, ; Carvalho, Bini, Diniz‐Filho, & Murphy, ; Chappuis, Ballesteros, & Gacia, ; Chappuis, Gacia, & Ballesteros, ; Heikkinen, Leikola, Fronzek, Lampinen, & Toivonen, ; Kennedy et al., , ; Lang & Murphy, ; Makkay, Pick, & Gillespie, ; Morandeira & Kandus, ; Murphy et al., ; Ranieri, Gantes, & Momo, ; Redekop, Hofstra, & Hussner, ; Santamaría, ; Tapia Grimaldo et al., ). Most of these studies have examined macrophyte diversity and distributions in cool‐temperate river and lake systems, with least attention being paid to warm‐water river macrophyte communities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%