Hierarchy of the factors influencing the broad-scale waterbirds
functional diversity gradients in temperate China
Abstract
Geographical gradients in species diversity have long fascinated
biogeographers and ecologists. However, the extent and generality of the
positive/negative effects of the important factors governing functional
diversity (FD) patterns are still debated, especially for the freshwater
domain. We examined lake productivity and functional richness (FRic) of
waterbirds sampled from 35 lakes and reservoirs in northern China with a
geographic coverage of over 5 million km2. We used structural equation
modelling (SEM) to explore the causal relationships between geographic
position, climate, lake productivity and waterbirds FRic. We found
unambiguous altitudinal and longitudinal gradients in lake productivity
and waterbirds FD, which were strongly mediated by local environmental
factors. Specifically, we found 1) lake productivity increased northeast
but decreased with altitude, and the observed gradients were driven by
climate and nutrient availability, with 93% of variation explained in
the individual SEM; 2) waterbirds FD showed similar geographic and
elevational gradients.; the environmental factors which had direct
and/or indirect effects on these geographic and elevational gradients
included climate, lake productivity and morphology, which collectively
explained more than 56% of the variation in waterbirds FD; and 3) a
significant (P = 0.029) causality between lake productivity and
waterbirds FD was confirmed. Nevertheless, the causality link was
relatively weak in comparison with climate and lake area (standardized
path coefficient was 0.65, 0.21, and 0.17 for climate, area, and
productivity, respectively). Through articulating the dominant causality
paths, our results could contribute to the mechanistic explanations
underlying the observed broad–scale biodiversity gradients.