Original paper

Spatial versus temporal heterogeneity in abundance of fishes in north-temperate lakes

Rypel, Andrew L.

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Fundamental and Applied Limnology Volume 195 Nr. 3 (2021), p. 173 - 185

122 references

published: Dec 15, 2021
published online: Aug 11, 2021
manuscript accepted: Jul 25, 2021
manuscript revision received: Jul 25, 2021
manuscript revision requested: Jul 11, 2021
manuscript received: Jun 19, 2021

DOI: 10.1127/fal/2021/1405

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Abstract

Probing relationships between spatial and temporal heterogeneity is a central pursuit in limnology and ecology, but until recently, data availability has constrained empirical tests of these patterns. In this study, I quantified spatial and temporal heterogeneity in fish species abundances within a landscape of north-temperate lakes and resolved an empirical relationship between heterogeneity dimensions. Across 18 species, there was an asymptotic relationship between spatial and temporal heterogeneity; thus spatial heterogeneity predicted temporal heterogeneity, but only at low heterogeneity levels. Some species expressed low levels of temporal-to-spatial heterogeneity while others, remarkably, had temporal heterogeneity ≥ 100 % spatial heterogeneity. Relationships between spatial and temporal heterogeneity are likely useful for conservation and management. For example, species with low temporal:spatial heterogeneity ratios might benefit from landscape-scale management efforts (e.g., watershed management, hydrologic connectance, public land acquisitions). In contrast, species with high temporal:spatial heterogeneity ratios might be more successfully managed locally (e.g., via biomanipulation, hydrologic management, habitat restoration).

Keywords

biocomplexity • freshwater fisheries • landscape context • limnology • long-term ecological research • LTER • populations • scales • trophic cascades • variance