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Macroinvertebrate richness is lower in high-elevation lakes vs nearby streams: evidence from Grand Teton National Park,Wyoming
Authors:Scott Hotaling  James Cody Bish
Institution:1. Department of Biology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA;2. Wyoming Natural Diversity Database, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, USA;3. Wyoming Game and Fish Department, Kaycee, Wyoming, USA
Abstract:Mountain ecosystems will be strongly impacted by climate change, yet little is known of extant biodiversity in high-elevation lakes, particularly in North America. In this study, we sampled the littoral zone of six alpine and subalpine lakes in Grand Teton National Park (GRTE), Wyoming, to characterise invertebrate diversity and environmental variation in these climate change-threatened ecosystems. Overall, we collected 19 aquatic invertebrate taxa, and found that each lake harboured a unique assemblage of invertebrates despite close geographic proximity in some instances (e.g. less than 5 km). The results of this study complement previous efforts focused on macroinvertebrate diversity of streams in the Teton Range, highlighting much lower diversity in montane lakes vs nearby streams. Taken together, the two studies establish an important baseline understanding of mountain freshwater biodiversity in GRTE. With rapidly changing hydrologic inputs to mountain lakes driven primarily by the recession of alpine glaciers, these results may help target aquatic invertebrates to monitor as climate change affects the region. Moreover, these data clarify habitat factors, both biotic and abiotic, that influence high-elevation lake assemblages of the Teton Range.
Keywords:Teton Range  aquatic ecology  lentic  climate change  alpine  subalpine
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