Abstract

Rivers and their floodplains offer a wide variety of habitats for invertebrates. River ecosystems are subject to high anthropic influence: as a result the channel morphology is changed, swamps are drained, floodplains are built up, and rivers are polluted. All this has radically changed the environment for the inhabitants of the floodplains, including riparian stenotopic species. Although riparian arthropods are oriented primarily to the production of hydro-ecosystems, the type of water body—lentic or lotic—has a determining effect in the structure of communities. Most riparian arthropods have evolutionarily adapted to riverbanks with significant areas of open alluvial banks. This paper considered the structure of assemblages of ground beetles associated with the riverbanks and the shores of floodplain lakes and their differences. The banks of rivers and the shores of floodplain lakes were considered separately due to the differences in the habitats associated with them. Our results showed that riverbanks, which experience significant pollution, were actively colonized by vegetation and were unsuitable for most riparian ground beetles. The shores of floodplain lakes, being an optional habitat for riparian arthropods, cannot serve as refugia. Thus, the transformation of floodplain landscapes and river pollution creates a problem for the biological diversity of floodplain ecosystems, since riparian stenotopic species of the riverbanks become rare and disappear.

Highlights

  • Rivers with their floodplains are some of the most diverse and biologically productive ecosystems on Earth [1,2]

  • Of the total number assemblages among stations and habitats and to analyze the patterns of the spatial distribution of of species) found in both types of habitats

  • A total of 95 species of ground beetles were found, of which 81 species were found on the riverbanks of the Psel and 51 species were found on the shores of floodplain lakes

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Summary

Introduction

Rivers with their floodplains are some of the most diverse and biologically productive ecosystems on Earth [1,2]. Unlike the seas and oceans, river ecosystems are highly dependent on the state of their floodplains. This dependence is magnified in small rivers. The dependence of the water quality in rivers on the state of the floodplain ecosystems is obvious today. In the 20th century, rivers, having lost their function as suppliers of water and food (a civilizational function), were turned into objects for recreation and sport fishing, and became receptors of wastewater from enterprises and municipal treatment facilities. River valleys include residential areas, agricultural lands, and industrial enterprises

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