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Responses of functional diversity of aquatic insect community to land use change in middle reach of Qiantang River, East China

ZHANG Lian-bo1, LIU Dong-xiao1, LIU Shuo-ru1, ZHANG Yong1, TONG Xiao-li2, WANG Bei-xin1   

  1. (1College of Plant Protection, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China; 2College of Resources & Environment, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou 544400, China)
  • Online:2013-10-18 Published:2013-10-18

Abstract: Based on the biological traits such as life history, resistance ability against environmental disturbance, and physiological characteristics of aquatic insects, and by using the fourthcorner statistical method, this paper studied the responses of the functional diversity of aquatic insect community to land use change in the middle reach of Qiantang River, Zhejiang Province of East China. For the test aquatic insect community, some of its biological traits were sensitive to land use change, and altered along human disturbance gradients as expected. With the increasing intensity of human disturbance, the maximal insect body length decreased gradually, the dominant respiration pattern evolved from gill respiration to tegument respiration, and the abundance of burrowers increased significantly. At the same time, the functional diversity measured as Rao’s quadratic entropy was significantly higher in reference sites than in disturbed sites (P<0.001), demonstrating that the changes in the functional diversity of the aquatic community were mainly induced by the land use change caused by human activities, which resulted in the decline of stream water quality and habitat quality and the variations of aquatic insect community composition and biological traits. The aquatic insect biological traits and functional diversity could be the potentially effective indicators in the stream health assessment in the future.