trait-based analyses for fishes and invertebrates in streams

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Trait-based Analyses for Fishes and Invertebrates in Streams Mark Pyron Stoeckerecological.com

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Trait-based Analyses for Fishes and Invertebrates in Streams. Stoeckerecological.com. Mark Pyron. River Habitat T emplet. Ideas for species traits-environmental filters (from Southwood 1977; used by Poff 1997). Why Traits?. Compare evolutionarily distinct systems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Trait-based Analyses for Fishes and Invertebrates in Streams

Mark Pyron

Stoeckerecological.com

Page 2: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

River Habitat Templet

Ideas for species traits-environmental filters

(from Southwood 1977; used by Poff 1997)

Page 3: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Why Traits?

• Compare evolutionarily distinct systems• Species-habitat relationships

• Ecosystem processes

Page 4: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Major assumption!

Present day habitat conditions match present day traits in organisms

Page 5: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Which traits?Which analyses?What are results?What are problems?

Page 6: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Which traits?

• Spatial and temporal heterogeneity of habitat define where and when the organisms use habitat

Page 7: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Traits:

• Should vary with ecological gradients

Page 8: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

and . . .

• Organisms with same traits occur in multiple biogeographical regions

– Different taxa

Page 9: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Traits of macroinvertebrates

• Trophic– Shredders, filterer-collector, grazer, predator

• Locomotion

• Body size

• Voltinism

• Respiration technique

Page 10: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Traits of macroinvertebrates

• Life history: reproductive strategies– Body size– Egg size, number, shape, attachment– Generations / year– Oviposition period -season– Incubation time– Clutch number

Page 11: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Traits of fishes

• Habitat preferences:– Stream size (small, medium, large)– Discharge– Temperature– Depth– Substrate size– Canopy

Page 12: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Traits of fishes

• Life history– Body size– Lifespan– Age at maturity– Egg size– Fecundity

Page 13: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Traits of fishes

• Dispersal ability

• Colonization ability

Page 14: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Traits of fishes

• Reproductive guilds

• IBI metrics

• Feeding and ecosystem interactions

• Morphology

Page 15: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Analyses – patterns Heino et al. 2013

Page 16: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Analyses – patterns Heino et al. 2013

• Across catchment– RCC predictions– Do organisms respond same to environmental

gradient?

Page 17: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Analyses – patterns Heino et al. 2013

• Across catchment

• Among region differences or convergence– Same traits in different local communities?– Compare trait responses to same gradients in

different geographical regions

Page 18: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Analyses – patterns Heino et al. 2013

• Across catchment• Among region differences or convergence• Across community – large extent or w/in

catchment– Trait variation across local communities in

drainage basin at large geographical extent

Page 19: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Analyses – testsHeino et al. 2013

Indirect ordination: CA, PCADirect ordination: CCA, RDA, RLQGroup test: MRPPLife history strategy: ANOVANiche Model: Maximum EntropyTrait diversity: regression, ANOVA

Page 20: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Results: macroinvertebrate traits

• Human impacts– Traits discriminate river reaches– Taxonomy could not – Genus level or family level sufficient – Gayraud et al. 2003

Page 21: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Results: macroinvertebrate trait richness

• Increases along local, catchment, and geographical gradients

• Bêche & Statzner 2009

Page 22: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Results: macroinvertebrate traits studies

• Trait richness correlated with genus richness Beche & Statzner 2009

Page 23: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Results: fish traits

• Hydrologic variability:

– Resource generalists vs. specialists – Poff & Allan 1995

Page 24: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Results: fish traits

• Hydrologic variability:

– Life-history traits – Tedesco et al. 2008; Mims & Olden 2012

Page 25: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Results: fish traits studies

• Taxonomy explains regional / geographic distributions of fishes

• Traits better explain local habitat type and stability, and regional distribution

• Hoeinghaus et al. 2006

Page 26: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Results: fish traits studies

• Difference in fish traits across river basins– Result of glaciation: filter– Colonizers had opportunistic traits: small body size,

brief lifespan, low age maturity, small eggs

– Mims et al. 2010– Jacquemin and Pyron 2011

Page 27: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Traits vs. taxa

• respond similarly to gradients?

– Predicted by Heino et al. 2013:

– Traits insensitive to geographical variation

– Taxa more geographically structured

• Depends on spatial extent of study

Page 28: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Problems with traits

• Developmental trophic changes

• Poorly known taxa; broad family characterizations often incorrect

• Traits are intercorrelated: not independent

Page 29: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Problems with traits

• Data quality of traits varies– Fuzzy coding, continuous variables, categories

Page 30: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Summary

• Functional traits are useful

• Tend to respond more strongly to environmental gradients than taxonomy

– Taxonomy is successful at distinguishing large-scale assemblage variation

Page 31: Trait-based Analyses  for Fishes  and  Invertebrates in Streams

Traits studies

• Gayraud et al. 2003• Goldstein & Meador

2005• Hoeinghaus et al.

2007• Frimpong &

Angermeier 2010• Menezes et al. 2010

• Pyron et al. 2011• Jacquemin & Pyron

2011• Pease et al. 2012• Heino et al. 2013