Long-term changes in multi-trophic diversity alter the functioning of
river food webs
Abstract
Increasing human pressures threaten fish diversity, with potentially
severe but unknown consequences to the functioning of riverine food
webs. Using a 17-years dataset from multi-trophic fish communities, we
investigated the long-term effects of human pressure (represented by
human footprint) on the species richness and energy flux across fish
food webs, a measure of ecosystem functioning. Combining metabolic
scaling theory and ecological network principles, we calculate the
annual energy flux through varying trophic compartments (i.e.,
top-carnivore, mesocarnivore, detritivore, and omnivore). Species
richness across all trophic compartments was positively associated with
energy flux. However, species richness decreased over time, alongside
with the energy flux at the whole-network level, which reduced by 75%.
Human pressure negatively affected both species richness and energy
flux, and the negative impacts of human pressure have intensified over
time. These results illustrate how human pressure can reduce diversity
and erode the energy flux through food webs, with long-term negative
implications for the functioning of natural ecosystems