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Marine and Freshwater Research Marine and Freshwater Research Society
Advances in the aquatic sciences

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This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

Benthic macroinvertebrates in rivers of agricultural lands in Argentina: the functional diversity response to environmental stress.

Christian Ávalos, Miguel Saigo 0000-0003-2206-2918, Magdalena Licursi

Abstract

Context: The rapid intensification of human impacts on rivers is a major threat for the provision of key ecosystem services for societies. In this context, many of these services rely on the ecological functions performed by macroinvertebrates. Therefore, understanding the relationship between human impacts and the functional diversity of macroinvertebrates is urgent. Aims: We aimed at analyzing the relationship between human impact and the functional diversity of macroinvertebrates in rivers of agricultural lands of Argentina. Methods: We sampled seven rivers of central Argentina during three seasons (Spring, autumn and winter). In each site we measured pesticides, metals, chlorophyll, nutrients and the taxonomic and functional diversity of macroinvertebrates. We summarized the environmental information using Principal Component Analysis and assessed the relationship between the assemblage metrics with the first 3 principal components. Key results: We found that functional metrics presented a negative relationship with the human impact gradient in the three seasons. However, taxonomic metrics showed less sensitivity. Conclusion The functional diversity of macroinvertebrates, but not the taxonomic diversity, decreases with increasing human impacts on rivers. Implications: Our result imply that functional metrics should be included in environmental monitoring in agricultural lands of Argentina.

MF24091  Accepted 10 May 2024

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