Polar Biology, volume 41, issue 10, pages 1995-2005
Freshwater diversity in Svalbard: providing baseline data for ecosystems in change
Bjørn Walseng
1
,
Thomas Jensen
1
,
INTA DIMANTE-DEIMANTOVICA
1
,
Kirsten S Christoffersen
2, 3
,
Mikhail Chertoprud
4
,
Elena Chertoprud
4
,
Anna Novichkova
4
,
Dag O. Hessen
5
1
NINA, Oslo, Norway
|
2
The University Centre in Svalbard, Longyearbyen, Norway
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2018-06-07
Journal:
Polar Biology
scimago Q2
SJR: 0.566
CiteScore: 3.6
Impact factor: 1.5
ISSN: 07224060, 14322056
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Abstract
The high Arctic is in a rapid transition due to climate change, and both direct effects due to warming and an extended growing season, as well as an indirect effect caused by increased bird activity and density (notably geese), strongly affect ponds and lakes. Our study presents the hitherto most comprehensive data on invertebrate freshwater diversity at Svalbard and had three main purposes: to provide a current “baseline” of community composition, to compare current species distribution and occurrence with older data to identify changes that have already occurred, and finally to identify how diversity and community composition are related to the age of localities. To address these aims, we conducted a survey of freshwater invertebrates in 75 ponds and lakes at Svalbard in August 2014 and 2015. We provide a full report of the species’ inventory data for zooplankton, benthos, and meiofauna. We also provide data for species that have likely colonized the sites over the previous decades. Finally, our study also clearly demonstrates a diversity gradient related to ecosystem age and/or parameters confounded with age (e.g., productivity), which may hint at the rate of colonization over the time span from the oldest to the youngest localities.
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