Can Artificial Ecological Islands Alter the Biodiversity of
Macroinvertebrate and Waterfowl? A Case Study in Fujin National Wetland
Park, Heilongjiang Province, China
Abstract
1. Many policies and studies globally have highlighted the pivotal role
of wetland ecosystems regarding wetland biota and their ecological
status. With the strengthening of wetland ecosystem management
legislation and policy, wetland restoration should also consider
increasing habitat diversity to improve biota. We explore whether the
construction of artificial ecological islands can increase the diversity
of wetland birds and macroinvertebrates before assessing the effects of
actively constructing islands via human intervention on wetland
protection. 2. We discuss changes in waterfowl and macroinvertebrate
diversity (i) with and without islands, (ii) at different water level
gradients surrounding the islands, (ⅲ) on different island substrates,
and (ⅳ) at different time scales. We used ANOVA, ANOSIM and cluster
analysis to test the differences. 3. The waterfowl and macroinvertebrate
communities had spatially heterogeneous distributions and vary over time
due to both natural and anthropogenic stresses. The establishment of
islands significantly changed the community composition and biodiversity
of the macroinvertebrate and the waterfowl. The waterfowl and
macroinvertebrate communities had different compositions at different
water levels. Macroinvertebrates are the main food components of
waterfowl and are closely related to them, and overall, abundance and
diversity of macroinvertebrates directly and/or indirectly affect the
biodiversity of waterfowl. Potentially, the construction of islands
could provide some co-benefits for the conservation of wetland birds and
macroinvertebrates. Synthesis and applications. Establishing artificial
ecological islands in broad open water areas and increasing the water
level gradient and substrate diversity. It can increase the
micro-habitat diversity by artificially increasing the heterogeneity of
the water depth conditions of a habitat. These changes can accommodate
aquatic organisms with different ecological niches to increase the
biodiversity, affecting the ecological restoration of inland freshwater
marshes and wetlands. As such, wetland parks can play a positive role in
protecting important bird migration pathways in northeast Asia.