Skip to main content
Dryad

Temporal variations of the multifaceted biodiversity and assembly mechanisms in lake fish assemblages

Data files

Dec 20, 2023 version files 63.16 KB

Abstract

Understanding long-term changes of fish diversity and community assembly rules is crucial for freshwater conservation. Growing evidence indicates that studying functional and phylogenetic diversity beyond purely taxonomic considerations can provide different but complementary information on community assembly. Here, the taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic β-diversity of fish communities, as well as the community assembly mechanisms were explored in five impounded lakes of the China’s South-to-North Water Diversion Project (SNWDP) from the 1980s to the 2010s. We found that: 1) there was an obvious trend of species homogenization in the five impounded lakes, but the long-term transformations of different dimensional β-diversities were divergent; 2) water quality and land use variables have greater impacts in multi-dimensional β-diversity; and, 3) community assembly process in taxonomic and functional dimensions were dominated by random process in both periods, while shifted from limiting similarity to habitat filtering in the phylogenetic dimension. These results highlight that functional and phylogenetic diversity are important additional ecological indices for assessing patterns of fish diversity in lakes.