4.5 Article

Aquatic insects and their environmental predictors: a scientometric study focused on environmental monitoring in lotic environmental

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
Volume 192, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-020-8147-z

Keywords

Environmental change; EPT; Land use; Spatial scale

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES) [086/2013]
  2. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq) [304710/2019-9]
  3. CNPq [141991/2016-0]
  4. BRC consortium
  5. Norsk Hydro
  6. CNPq Postdoctoral Scholarship [154761/2018-4]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Since early studies about aquatic ecology, it has been found that changes in environmental conditions alter aquatic insect communities. Based on this, the combined study of environmental conditions and aquatic insect communities has become an important tool to monitor and manage freshwater systems. However, there is no consensus about which environmental predictors and facets of diversity are more useful for environmental monitoring. The objective of this work was to conduct a scientometric analysis to identify the main environmental predictors and biological groups used to monitor and manage lotic freshwater systems. We conducted a scientometric study on the Web of Science platform using the following words: stream, river, aquatic insect, Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, Trichoptera, Odonata, Heteroptera, Chironomidae, bioindicator, environmental change, anthropic, and land use. Although most of the environmental predictors employed are local, intrinsic of freshwater systems using local environmental and associated landscape variables is a better strategy to predict aquatic insect communities. The facets of diversity most used are composition and richness of species and genera, which are not efficient at measuring the loss of ecosystem services and extinction of phylogenetic lineages. Although very important, these functional and phylogenetic facets are poorly explored for this purpose. Even though tropical regions are the most diverse globally and are experiencing major losses of native vegetation, these ecosystems are the least studied, a knowledge gap that needs addressing to better understand the effect of anthropogenic activities on the diversity of aquatic insects.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available