4.6 Article

A matter of suborder: are Zygoptera and Anisoptera larvae influenced by riparian vegetation in Neotropical Savanna streams?

Journal

HYDROBIOLOGIA
Volume 848, Issue 19, Pages 4433-4443

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-021-04642-6

Keywords

Cerrado streams; Damselflies; Dragonflies; GLM; Immatures; Odonata

Funding

  1. Programa Peixe Vivo of Companhia Energetica de Minas Gerais [GT-487, GT-599]
  2. CoordenacAo de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES)
  3. National Council for Scientific & Technological Development (CNPq) [304710/2019-9, 304060/2020-8, 304102/2018-0]
  4. Fulbright Brasil grant
  5. PD Aneel-Cemig [GT-611]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Initial Odonata larval distributions are influenced by adult females at oviposition; post-oviposition, larvae are affected by environmental conditions. Different riparian preferences of Zygoptera and Anisoptera larvae are influenced by canopy shading, temperature range, and habitat heterogeneity.phasis on maintaining riparian canopy cover for maintaining richness of Zygoptera larvae.
Initial Odonata larval distributions are primarily influenced by adult females at the moment of oviposition. However, after oviposition, the larvae are strongly associated with environmental conditions. In the case of both adults and larvae, anthropogenic disturbances that change these conditions may alter the composition and structure of Odonata assemblages. Therefore, based on the differing environmental requirements of Zygoptera and Anisoptera adults and larvae, together with their morphological and physiological differences, we suspected differing riparian preferences of larvae and adults for each suborder. We evaluated the richness and abundance of Odonata larvae. We hypothesized that Zygoptera larvae would have greater richness and abundance in streams with canopy shading, lower temperature ranges, and high physical habitat heterogeneity. On the other hand, Anisoptera larvae would be more abundant in streams without canopy cover. We sampled 186 headwater stream sites in the Neotropical Savanna along an anthropogenic disturbance gradient and used a model selection approach to test our hypotheses, correlating environmental metrics with Odonata larval richness and abundance. We found higher richness of Zygoptera larvae in shaded sites with canopy cover > 5 m high, whereas bare ground without riparian vegetation was important for Anisoptera richness and abundance. Our results indicated that Odonata larvae follow the same distribution, richness and abundance patterns as adults. Anthropogenic disturbances related to the removal or reduction of riparian vegetation can favor Anisoptera over Zygoptera larval assemblages in streams. Preserving riparian canopy cover is needed to maintain the richness of Zygoptera larvae in Neotropical Savanna streams.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available