A quantitative and representative method to delineate freshwater regions
for biodiversity conservation
Abstract
Abstract: Effective biodiversity conservation requires reasonable
targeted regionalization, and insufficient data and unclear targets
often lead to conservation biases and deficiencies. So, we explored
quantitative and representative methods to delineate freshwater
biodiversity regions. We established a river-lake network model as the
mask of the Yangtze River Basin. Based on field samplings and the
literatures, we filtered the environmental variables by principal
component analysis, and identified key factors to distribution of fish
functional group and macroinvertebrate taxonomic group by Mantel test,
then conducted species distribution models using maximum entropy
modeling. We delineated biodiversity regionalization using the binary
data of high suitability in the hydrological units (HUs) by spatial
cluster analysis, then calculated Jaccard dissimilarity index (βdissim)
among all HUs. Proportion of vegetation and waterbody type are key to
the distribution of annelids and mollusks, while distribution of
arthropods depend more on bioclimatic and topographic variables. For
fish, topographic and hydrological variables were more important. We
have delineated seven freshwater biodiversity regions (HWR, HDR, WSR,
DQR, QWR, LXR and FPR). The βdissim of fish is the highest in LXR and
FPR, while for macroinvertebrates, it is the highest in HWR. Species
distribution models could compensate for the scarce and uneven data.
Single target, and region delineation based on provincial administration
or subbasins are insufficient for biodiversity conservation. Transition
zones and confluent regions exhibit higher species richness and beta
diversity, while these regions are often overlooked. We hope the method
could serve as a reference to realize comprehensive of systematic
conservation planning for biodiversity conservation.