Multi-decadal improvements in the ecological quality of European rivers are not consistently reflected in biodiversity metrics.
James S SinclairEllen A R WeltiFlorian AltermattMario Álvarez-CabriaJukka AroviitaNathan Jay BakerLibuše BarešováJosé Barquín OrtizLuca BonacinaNúria BonadaMiguel Cañedo-ArgüellesZoltán CsabaiElvira de EytoAlain DohetGerald DörflingerTor E EriksenVesela EvtimovaMaria João FeioMartial FerréolMathieu FlouryMarie Anne Forio EurieRiccardo FornaroliPeter L M GoethalsJani HeinoDaniel HeringKaisa-Leena HuttunenSonja C JähnigRichard K JohnsonLenka KuglerováBenjamin KupilasLionel L'HosteAitor LarrañagaPatrick LeitnerArmin W LorenzBrendan G McKieTimo MuotkaDiana OsadčajaRiku PaavolaVaidas PalinauskasPetr PařilFrancesca PilottoMarek PolášekJes Jessen RasmussenRalf B SchäferAstrid Schmidt-KloiberAlberto ScottiAgnija SkujaMichal StrakaRachel StubbingtonHenn TimmVioleta TyufekchievaIakovos TziortzisRudy VannevelGábor VárbíróGaute VelleRalf C M VerdonschotSarah VrayPeter HaasePublished in: Nature ecology & evolution (2024)
Humans impact terrestrial, marine and freshwater ecosystems, yet many broad-scale studies have found no systematic, negative biodiversity changes (for example, decreasing abundance or taxon richness). Here we show that mixed biodiversity responses may arise because community metrics show variable responses to anthropogenic impacts across broad spatial scales. We first quantified temporal trends in anthropogenic impacts for 1,365 riverine invertebrate communities from 23 European countries, based on similarity to least-impacted reference communities. Reference comparisons provide necessary, but often missing, baselines for evaluating whether communities are negatively impacted or have improved (less or more similar, respectively). We then determined whether changing impacts were consistently reflected in metrics of community abundance, taxon richness, evenness and composition. Invertebrate communities improved, that is, became more similar to reference conditions, from 1992 until the 2010s, after which improvements plateaued. Improvements were generally reflected by higher taxon richness, providing evidence that certain community metrics can broadly indicate anthropogenic impacts. However, richness responses were highly variable among sites, and we found no consistent responses in community abundance, evenness or composition. These findings suggest that, without sufficient data and careful metric selection, many common community metrics cannot reliably reflect anthropogenic impacts, helping explain the prevalence of mixed biodiversity trends.