Abstract
Environmental conditions change rapidly across altitude, shaping diversity and structure of communities. Because lotic and lentic communities are often distinct and experience different environmental and anthropogenic conditions, understanding whether the diversity of these communities changes similarly across altitude is fundamental to determine how biota responds to ecological gradients in a human-dominated landscape. In this study, we carried out a comparative analysis of the altitudinal pattern of the diversity of odonates in lotic and lentic ecosystems in Kabylia (north-central Algeria) across 16 sites (eight lotic and eight lentic sites). We estimated species richness, abundance, and Shannon index as well as three environmental factors (water temperature, pH, and human disturbance) in each site. We recorded a total of 33 species (10 Zygoptera and 23 Anisoptera) with 20 species in lotic sites and 28 species in lentic sites. We recorded a similar decreasing altitudinal pattern of water temperature and human influence, but no pattern in pH. Interestingly, species richness, abundance, and Shannon index increased with altitude in lotic sites, but showed a weak negative correlation in lentic sites. These contracting patterns could be due to the interplay of a geographic gradient in anthropogenic pressure and habitat-specific species sensitivity to anthropogenic stress.
Acknowledgements
We thank two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments, which improved the quality of an earlier version of the paper. We are grateful to everyone who helped us in the field. We also warmly thank Dr. Rassim Khelifa for helpful comments and suggestions.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).