ABSTRACT Mountain freshwater communities are generally considered sensible to accelerated climatic changes, though their vulnerabilities have not been well evaluated. Individual species or species groups are expected to respond differently depending on their adaptations, traits, or distributions, but this has not yet been distinguished. This work used available climate change vulnerability scores (ccvs) of European Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera (EPT) species (n = 1,402) to (1) compare the vulnerability between species pools of different ecoregions including alpine species and alpine endemics, (2) contrast the vulnerability between the different insect orders, and (3) assess the altitude–vulnerability relationship within the European Alps. We revealed fifty alpine Plecoptera and Trichoptera species that are categorized highly vulnerable to climate change effects (= 31 percent of all highly vulnerable European species) with the highest proportions in species inventories of alpine endemics and high-altitude waters (51 percent of high-altitude species are classified as highly vulnerable). The ccvs analysis specifically for mountain waters shows that a disproportionately high number of alpine species, and particularly alpine endemics, will be affected by climate change and suggests that Ephemeroptera may be better prepared than Plecoptera and Trichoptera. Thus, this trait-based evaluation suggests that mountain stream invertebrate communities are undergoing disproportionate restructurings in response to climate change effects more than lowland communities are.
Read full abstract