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Spring forth diversity: Specialist species contribute to the conservation value of headwater springs and streams at the landscape scale

Kabir, Jamal; Biondi, Giulio; Gething, Kieran J.; Aspin, Thomas; Sykes, Tim; Stubbington, Rachel

Authors

Jamal Kabir

Giulio Biondi

Kieran J. Gething

Thomas Aspin

Tim Sykes

Rachel Stubbington



Abstract

Headwater springs and streams often occur in relatively remote areas, reducing their exposure to human influences and thus increasing their collective capacity to support high biodiversity. Their aquatic macroinvertebrate communities can include species of conservation interest, some of which are specialists associated with groundwater inputs, low water temperature or temporary flow. However, the inaccessibility of some spring and stream networks has left their communities poorly characterized, limiting our capacity to implement effective conservation strategies. We characterized the biodiversity and conservation value of macroinvertebrate communities in a network of 51 relatively inaccessible and unimpacted headwater spring and stream sites spanning multiple catchments in a single landscape type: the chalk downland of south England. At each site, we kick sampled macroinvertebrate communities and recorded environmental variables, including flow permanence. To represent each community, we calculated taxa richness, coverage‐adjusted Hill‐Shannon diversity, the local contribution to beta diversity, and an index of richness and species rarity. We used the latter three metrics to rank sites based on their biodiversity and conservation value and analyzed relationships between metrics and environmental variables. We found specialists of springs, cold waters, groundwaters and temporary flow regimes, including rare species of conservation value. Some metrics responded to environmental variables, but top‐ranking sites had highly variable environmental characteristics. We highlight the value of individual headwater streams with contrasting characteristics as contributors to ecologically heterogeneous site networks. Our results can inform landscape‐scale management strategies that protect headwaters as refuges that support biodiverse communities, including rare species, as they adapt to global change.

Citation

Kabir, J., Biondi, G., Gething, K. J., Aspin, T., Sykes, T., & Stubbington, R. (2024). Spring forth diversity: Specialist species contribute to the conservation value of headwater springs and streams at the landscape scale. River Research and Applications, 40(5), 863-874. https://doi.org/10.1002/rra.4275

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 13, 2024
Online Publication Date Mar 29, 2024
Publication Date 2024-06
Deposit Date May 1, 2024
Publicly Available Date May 1, 2024
Journal River Research and Applications
Print ISSN 1535-1459
Electronic ISSN 1535-1467
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 40
Issue 5
Pages 863-874
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/rra.4275
Keywords flow permanence, winterbourne, freshwater spring, headwater spring, macroinvertebrate, headwater stream, landscape‐scale conservation

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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Copyright Statement
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.





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