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Riparian ecosystem in the alpine connectome. Terrestrial-aquatic and terrestrial-terrestrial interactions in high elevation lakes

View ORCID ProfileDragos G. Zaharescu, View ORCID ProfileAntonio Palanca-Soler, View ORCID ProfilePeter S. Hooda, Catalin Tanase, View ORCID ProfileCarmen I. Burghelea, Richard N. Lester
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/035576
Dragos G. Zaharescu
aBiosphere-2, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, U.S.A.
bEcology and Animal Biology Department, University of Vigo, Vigo, Pontevedra, Spain
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  • For correspondence: zaha_dragos@yahoo.com apalanca@uvigo.es p.hooda@kingston.ac.uk tanase@uaic.ro bcarmen@email.arizona.edu
Antonio Palanca-Soler
bEcology and Animal Biology Department, University of Vigo, Vigo, Pontevedra, Spain
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Peter S. Hooda
cSchool of Natural and Built Environments, Kingston University London, U.K.
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Catalin Tanase
dFaculty of Biology, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University, Iași, Romania
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Carmen I. Burghelea
aBiosphere-2, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, U.S.A.
bEcology and Animal Biology Department, University of Vigo, Vigo, Pontevedra, Spain
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Richard N. Lester
eFormerly at Birmingham University Botanic Gardens, Birmingham, U.K. Passed away in April 2006 in Birmingham, U.K.
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ABSTRACT

Alpine regions are under increased attention worldwide do their role in storing freshwater of high quality and their high sensitivity to climate change - comparable only to the poles. Riparian ecosystems in such regions, integrating water and nutrient fluxes from aquatic and terrestrial environments, host a disproportionally rich biodiversity, despite experiencing severe climate and nutrient restrictions. With climate change rapidly encroaching in the alpine biome, it is important to fully understand how the lake and its surrounding landscape elements sustain such rich ecosystems, before their functional connectivity could be seriously severed.

A total of 189 glacial origin lakes in the Central Pyrenees were surveyed to test how key elements of lake and terrestrial environments work together at different scales to shape the riparian plant composition. Secondly, we evaluated how these ecotope features drive the formation of riparian communities potentially sensitive to environmental change, and assessed their habitat distribution. At each lake plant taxonomic composition was assessed together with elemental composition of water and sediment and ecosystem-relevant geographical factors.

At macroscale vegetation composition responded to pan-climatic gradients altitude and latitude, which captured, in a narrow geographic area the transition between large European climatic zones. Hydrodynamics was the main catchment-scale factor connecting riparian vegetation with large-scale water fluxes, followed by topography and geomorphology. Lake sediment Mg and Pb, and water Mn and Fe contents reflected local connections with nutrient availability, and water saturation of the substrate.

Community analysis identified four keystone plant communities of large niche breadths, present in a wide range of habitats, from (i) damp environments, (ii) snow bed-silicate bedrock, (iii) wet heath, and (iv) limestone bedrock. With environmental change advancing in the alpine biome, this study provides critical information on fundamental linkages between riparian ecosystem and surrounding landscape elements, which could prove invaluable in assessing future biomic impacts.

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Graphical abstract:

Riparian ecosystem of Lake Cardal (0.3ha, 2224m a.s.l) in the Pyrenees National Park (France), with a network diagram of connected landscape elements. Photo by Antonio Palanca-Soler.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted January 19, 2017.
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Riparian ecosystem in the alpine connectome. Terrestrial-aquatic and terrestrial-terrestrial interactions in high elevation lakes
Dragos G. Zaharescu, Antonio Palanca-Soler, Peter S. Hooda, Catalin Tanase, Carmen I. Burghelea, Richard N. Lester
bioRxiv 035576; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/035576
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Riparian ecosystem in the alpine connectome. Terrestrial-aquatic and terrestrial-terrestrial interactions in high elevation lakes
Dragos G. Zaharescu, Antonio Palanca-Soler, Peter S. Hooda, Catalin Tanase, Carmen I. Burghelea, Richard N. Lester
bioRxiv 035576; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/035576

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