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Dryad

Resource quantity and quality differentially control stream invertebrate biodiversity across spatial scales

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May 22, 2023 version files 164.82 KB

Abstract

Resource quantity controls biodiversity across spatial scales, however the importance of resource quality to cross-scale patterns in species richness has seldom been explored. We evaluated the relationship between stream basal resource quantity (periphyton chlorophyll-a) and invertebrate richness and compared this to the relationship of resource quality (periphyton stoichiometry) and richness at local and regional scales across 27 North American streams. At the local scale, invertebrate richness peaked at intermediate levels of chlorophyll-a, but had a shallow negative relationship with periphyton C:P and N:P. However, at the regional scale richness had a strong negative relationship with both chlorophyll-a and periphyton C:P and N:P. The divergent effects of periphyton chl-a and stoichiometry on invertebrate richness suggest that basal resource quantity limits diversity more than resource quality, consistent with patterns of eutrophication. Collectively, we demonstrate that resource quantity and quality play important, yet differing roles in shaping freshwater biodiversity across spatial scale.