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Local and landscape drivers of aquatic-to-terrestrial subsidies in riparian ecosystems: a worldwide meta-analysis

View ORCID ProfileD. Lafage, View ORCID ProfileE. Bergman, View ORCID ProfileR. L. Eckstein, M. Österling, J.P. Sadler, View ORCID ProfileJJ Piccolo
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/446815
D. Lafage
1Karlstad University. Department of Environmental and Life Sciences / Biology
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E. Bergman
1Karlstad University. Department of Environmental and Life Sciences / Biology
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R. L. Eckstein
1Karlstad University. Department of Environmental and Life Sciences / Biology
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M. Österling
1Karlstad University. Department of Environmental and Life Sciences / Biology
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J.P. Sadler
2School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom
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JJ Piccolo
1Karlstad University. Department of Environmental and Life Sciences / Biology
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Abstract

Cross-boundary fluxes of organisms and matter, termed “subsidies”, are now recognized to be reciprocal and of roughly equal importance for both aquatic and terrestrial systems, even if terrestrial input to aquatic ecosystems has received most attention. The magnitude of aquatic to terrestrial subsidies is well documented, but the drivers behind these subsidies and their utilization by terrestrial consumers are characteristically local scale studies, limiting the inferences that can be drawn for broader geographic scales. We therefore built and analyzed a database of stable isotope data extracted from 21 studies worldwide, to identify both landscape and local scale variables that may affect the diet of terrestrial predators in riparian ecosystems. Our meta-analysis revealed a greater magnitude of aquatic-to-terrestrial subsidies (> 50%) than previously reported, albeit with large geographic and inter-annual variations. We demonstrated a large effect of landscape-scale factors on aquatic-to-terrestrial subsidies, particularly anthropogenic land use and tree cover. Local human population was the only relevant factor at the local scale. We also found that studies on landscape-scale and anthropogenic land use effects on aquatic-to-terrestrial subsidies are currently strongly under-represented in the ecological literature. Such studies are needed to improve our understanding of how land use and environmental change might influence future patterns of biodiversity and ecosystem function.

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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 October 18, 2018.
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Local and landscape drivers of aquatic-to-terrestrial subsidies in riparian ecosystems: a worldwide meta-analysis
D. Lafage, E. Bergman, R. L. Eckstein, M. Österling, J.P. Sadler, JJ Piccolo
bioRxiv 446815; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/446815
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Local and landscape drivers of aquatic-to-terrestrial subsidies in riparian ecosystems: a worldwide meta-analysis
D. Lafage, E. Bergman, R. L. Eckstein, M. Österling, J.P. Sadler, JJ Piccolo
bioRxiv 446815; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/446815

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