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Arctic chironomids of the northwest North Atlantic reflect environmental and biogeographic gradients.

Authors :
Medeiros, Andrew S.
Milošević, Đurađ
Francis, Donna R.
Maddison, Eleanor
Woodroffe, Sarah
Long, Antony
Walker, Ian R.
Hamerlík, Ladislav
Quinlan, Roberto
Langdon, Peter
Brodersen, Klaus P.
Axford, Yarrow
Source :
Journal of Biogeography. Mar2021, Vol. 48 Issue 3, p511-525. 15p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Aim: While we understand broad climate drivers of insect distributions throughout the Arctic, less is known about the role of spatial processes in determining these relationships. As such, there is a need to understand how spatial controls may influence our interpretations of chironomid environment relationships. Here, we evaluated whether the distribution of chironomids followed spatial gradients, or were primarily controlled by environmental factors. Location: Eastern Canadian Arctic, Greenland, Iceland. Taxon: Non‐biting midges (Chironomidae). Methods: We examined chironomid assemblages from 239 lakes in the western North Atlantic Arctic region (specifically from the Arctic Archipelago of Canada, two parts of west Greenland (the southwest and central west) and northwest Iceland). We used a combination of unconstrained ordination (Self Organizing Maps); a simple method with only one data matrix (community data), and constrained ordination (Redundancy Analysis); a canonical ordination with two datasets where we extracted structure of community related to environmental data. These methods allowed us to model chironomid assemblages across a large bioregional dimension and identify specific differences between regions that were defined by common taxa represented across all regions in high frequencies, as well as rare taxa distinctive to each region found in low frequencies. We then evaluated the relative importance of spatial processes versus local environmental factors. Results: We find that environmental controls explained the largest amount of variation in chironomid assemblages within each region, and that spatial controls are only significant when crossing between regions. Broad‐scale biogeographic effects on chironomid distributions are reflected by the distinct differences among chironomid assemblages of Iceland, central‐west Greenland, and eastern Canada, defined by the presence of certain common and low‐frequency, rare taxa for each region. Environmental gradients, especially temperature, defined species distributions within each region, whereas spatial processes combine with environmental gradients in determining what mix of species characterizes each broad and geographically distinct island region in our study. Main conclusions: While biogeographic context is important for defining interpretations of environmental controls on species distributions, the primary control on distributions within regions is environmental. These influences are fundamentally important for reconstructing past environmental change and better understanding historical distributions of these insect indicators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Subjects

Subjects :
*CHIRONOMIDAE
*CALANUS

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03050270
Volume :
48
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biogeography
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148997423
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14015