Functional dimension reveal impacts of non-native fishes on native fishes and ecosystem functionality
Data files
Sep 05, 2025 version files 13.81 KB
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Fasta_S1.nwk
2.01 KB
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README.md
5.38 KB
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Table_S1.csv
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Abstract
Anthropogenic-mediated invasions of non-native species are leading to biodiversity loss in many trophic groups, with specific impacts on a wide range of ecosystem functions and services. However, the impacts of non-native species on native species and ecosystem multifunctionality are not well understood, particularly due to the lack of long-term studies that focus on the analysis of functional and phylogenetic diversities. Using a comprehensive dataset spanning nearly 80 years from Lake Erhai, China, we assessed the impact of non-native fishes on the multidimensional diversity of native fishes, as well as the cascading effects on the multifunctional components of the ecosystem, including productivity, decomposition, and average multifunctionality. Over time, the multidimensional diversity of non-native fishes steadily increased, whereas that of native species declined markedly. Concurrently, both ecosystem productivity and average multifunctionality exhibited significant upward trends. Long‑term invasion by non‑native fishes was significantly negatively correlated with the multidimensional diversity of native fishes. A consistent convergence–divergence–convergence pattern was observed in trait spaces and in functional and phylogenetic community patterns of overall fish communities. Ecosystem multifunctionality increased with non-native fish functional diversity, though this positive relationship became negative at higher diversity levels. In contrast, native fish functional diversity and environmental factors—including average water level, Secchi depth, and annual precipitation—were consistently negatively associated with multifunctionality. These findings underscore the importance of integrating functional perspective in biodiversity monitoring and management to enhance our understanding of, and foster more effective strategies for addressing, the long-term impacts of non-native species on native species and ecosystem multifunctionality.
GENERAL INFORMATION
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Title of Dataset: Functional dimension reveal impacts of non-native fishes on native fishes and ecosystem functionality
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Author Information
A. Principal Investigator Contact Information
Name: Zhice Liang
Institution: Institute of Hydrobiology
Address: Wuhan, China
Email: liangzhice@ihb.ac.cnB. Associate or Co-investigator Contact Information
Name: Chuanbo Guo
Institution: Institute of Hydrobiology
Address: Wuhan, China
Email: guocb@ihb.ac.cn -
Date of data collection (single date, range, approximate date): From the 1950s to the 2020s
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Geographic location of data collection: Lake Erhai, Yunnan, China
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Information about funding sources that supported the collection of the data: National Natural Science Foundation of China: NO. 32172980; the National Key Research and Development Program of China: No. 2023YFD2400900;the earmarked fund for China Agriculture Research System: CARS-45; China Scholarship Council: No. 202304910486
SHARING/ACCESS INFORMATION
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Licenses/restrictions placed on the data: CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) Public Domain
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Links to publications that cite or use the data: Liang, Z., Jackson, D. A., Liu, J., Guo, C. (2025). Functional dimension reveal impacts of non-native fishes on native fishes and ecosystem functionality. Global Change Biology.
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Links to other publicly accessible locations of the data: None
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Links/relationships to ancillary data sets: None
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Was data derived from another source? No
If yes, list source(s): NA -
Recommended citation for this dataset:
Liang, Z., Guo, C. (2025). Data from: Functional dimension reveal impacts of non-native fishes on native fishes and ecosystem functionality. Dryad Digital Repository. DOI: 10.5061/dryad.sf7m0cgj8
DATA & FILE OVERVIEW
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File List:
A) Table S1: Functional traits for each identified fish species
B) Fasta S1: Comparative sequences of the mitochondrial COⅠ gene (cytochrome c oxidase subunit Ⅰ) for each identified fish species -
Relationship between files, if important: None
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Additional related data collected that was not included in the current data package: None
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Are there multiple versions of the dataset? No
A. If yes, name of file(s) that was updated: NA
i. Why was the file updated? NA
ii. When was the file updated? NA#########################################################################
DATA-SPECIFIC INFORMATION FOR: Table S1: Functional traits for each identified fish species
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Number of variables: 16
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Number of cases/rows: 41
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Variable List:
- Fish species
- Relative mouth gape size (The ratio of mouth width to body length, mm)
- Mouth shape (The ratio of mouth width to mouth depth, mm)
- Mouth position (The ratio of the distance from the upper edge of the mouth to the bottom of the body to the body height, mm)
- Length of digestive tract (The ratio of the length of the digestive tract to body length, mm)
- Eye size (The ratio of the diameter of the eye to the body height passing through the center of the eye, mm)
- Eye position (The ratio of the height from the center of the eye to the bottom of the body to the body height, mm)
- Cross sectional shape of fish body (The ratio of body height to body width, mm)
- Pectoral fin position (The ratio of the distance from the pectoral fin to the anterior end of the fish to the body length, mm)
- Aspect ratio of pectoral fin (The ratio of the length to the width of the pectoral fin, mm)
- Tailstock adjustment (The ratio of body height to caudal peduncle height, mm)
- Aspect ratio of caudal fin (The ratio of the length to the height of the caudal fin, mm)
- Area ratio of pectoral fin to caudal fin (The ratio of the area of the pectoral fin to the area of the caudal fin, mm)
- Migration type (1- Reproductive migration, 2- Forage migration, 3- Overwinter migration, 4- Resident fish species, categorical variable)
- Habitat water layer (1- Midwater; 2- Mid-lower layer; 3- Bottom layer, categorical variable)
- Dietary preference (1- Filter feeding; 2- Carnivorous; 3- Herbivorous; 4- Omnivorous, categorical variable)
- Reproductive mode (1- Buoyant eggs, 2- Floating eggs, 3- Adhesive/sinking eggs, 4- Other, categorical variable)
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Missing data codes: None
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Specialized formats or other abbreviations used: None
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DATA-SPECIFIC INFORMATION FOR: Fasta S1: Comparative sequences of the mitochondrial COⅠ gene (cytochrome c oxidase subunit Ⅰ) for each identified fish species.
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Variable List:
- Fish species
- Comparative sequences of the mitochondrial COⅠ gene
- Branch Lengths
- Bootstrap values
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Missing data codes: None
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Specialized formats or other abbreviations used: None
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File type and software suggestion for opening and viewing: The file is in FASTA format (plain text sequence file). It can be opened with any text editor (e.g., Notepad, VS Code, Sublime Text). For sequence alignment and phylogenetic analysis, it can also be viewed and processed with common bioinformatics software such as MEGA, UGENE, AliView, BioEdit, or programming libraries such as Biopython and Bioconductor.
