Abstract

Under a global change scenario, human-induced impacts alter multiple facets of river biodiversity (i.e., taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic). Hence, focusing on changes in community assembly and different diversity dimensions along anthropogenic impact gradients is of paramount importance for ecological research. Here, we classified stream sites into near-pristine (NP), moderately impacted (MI) and highly impacted (HI) categories based on a comprehensive anthropogenic impact score for the Hanjiang River Basin (China), and tested for differences in patterns of functional (FD) and phylogenetic diversity (PD). Our study suggests that NP sites showed higher FD and PD than impacted streams (MI and HI), with their communities being phylogenetically overdispersed and mostly shaped by random processes. Anthropogenically impacted sites mostly harbored closely related and functionally similar species, although the degree of clustering varied between NP, MI and HI streams, thereby confirming predictions that human activities contribute to the loss of evolutionary history and functional space in running waters. Importantly, we identified the influence of underlying deterministic mechanisms on the homogenization of both functional and phylogenetic facets of diversity. Similarly, NP sites exhibited the greatest proportion of evolutionarily distinct lineages, suggesting that anthropogenic impacts also threaten phylogenetically unique clades. Overall, this study contributed to a better understanding of multiple diversity patterns in aquatic insect communities by generating new empirical evidence of human-induced degradation of subtropical stream ecosystems in China.

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