The major threats to biodiversity affects freshwater ecosystems across
multiple ecological levels.
- Tauany Rodrigues,
- Helena Prado,
- Vinicius Farjalla,
- Aliny Pires
Tauany Rodrigues
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Corresponding Author:tauanyrodrigues27@gmail.com
Author ProfileVinicius Farjalla
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro Instituto de Biologia
Author ProfileAbstract
Human-induced transformations lead to multiple threats to biodiversity
in freshwater ecosystems mainly related to climate change, biological
invasion, land use change, pollution, and overexploitation. These
threats operate through multiple mechanisms, which can be complementary
or compensatory. However, the effects of the major threats to
biodiversity across ecological scales are still unclear, as well as its
operating mechanisms. We performed a meta-analysis on their impacts on
freshwater ecosystems to assess their general and relative importance
across multiple ecological levels. We demonstrated that pollution was
consistently the most important threat to freshwater ecosystems change,
but the relative importance of each threat depended on the ecological
level. At the population level, nutrient loading driven by pollution and
climatic warming had higher relative importance, increasing metabolic
rates through a bottom-up effect. However, this effect did not propagate
to other ecological scales. Communities were more sensitive to the
impacts of biological invasion and land use change, both synergically
decreasing their diversity, evenness, and richness. At the ecosystem
level, both pollution and land use change impacts were more relevant to
eutrophication of freshwater ecosystems. We highlight the lack of
information on impacts from overexploitation and studies demonstrating
the combined effect among these major threats. We concluded that
freshwater ecosystems are prone to these threats by a set of pathways in
which their impacts are not equally widespread across the ecological
levels, affecting them in a multidirectional way. We reinforce the
importance of designing conservation strategies that allow counteracting
the impacts of biodiversity loss by multiple pathways and including such
multidirectionality to plan global actions to protect freshwater
ecosystems.