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Long-term changes and seasonal variability in the stream macrofauna of a Himalayan river system

Jacobsen, Dean, Ormerod, Steve J. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8174-302X, Juttner, Ingrid, Rojas, Oscar, Thoro Martinsen, Kenneth, Thapa, Bhumika, Khatri, Kumar, Paudel, Pratima, Rai, Manita, Raut, Nani and Gurung, Smriti 2024. Long-term changes and seasonal variability in the stream macrofauna of a Himalayan river system. Inland Waters 10.1080/20442041.2024.2394278
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Abstract

Interpreting long-term variability in mountain stream ecosystems is challenging where potential causes such as climate change and altered land-use act simultaneously. The scarcity of historical data also limits research opportunity, especially at low latitudes. Here we assess the macroinvertebrate fauna of 12 Himalayan streams in Nepal covering an altitudinal gradient from 1500 to 3900 m asl using data from 1992, 2022 and 2023. We aimed to: 1) compare long-term change in richness and community composition over three decades to short-term seasonal variation, and 2) analyse long-term changes in relation to catchment properties. Rarefied richness decreased equally with altitude in 1992 and 2022, but was greater at most sites in 2022, with several new families detected. In contrast, no clear seasonal pattern was found. The 2022:1992 ratio in rarefied richness was positively correlated with catchment area and weakly with maximum catchment altitude, while the two highest and glaciated sites gained relatively more taxa than other sites. NMDS ordinations from rarefied Bray-Curtis dissimilarities showed considerable overlap in communities among the three datasets. Pairwise rarefied dissimilarities among all sites increased significantly with altitudinal distance between sites in 1992 while there was no such relationship in 2022. Dissimilarities between 1992 and 2022 samples showed a near-significant correlation with increased catchment vegetation cover as shown by NDVI. Our study is the first to document long-term variations in stream macroinvertebrate communities in Himalayan mountain streams, illustrating how some altitudinal patterns have remained stable through time while others appear to have weakened with links to global change.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Published Online
Status: In Press
Schools: Biosciences
Water Research Institute (WATER)
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
ISSN: 2044-2041
Date of First Compliant Deposit: 5 September 2024
Date of Acceptance: 15 August 2024
Last Modified: 06 Sep 2024 02:35
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/171559

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