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Articles

High incidence of exotic ostracods in the rice fields of a protected Mediterranean wetland

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Pages 428-445 | Received 28 Feb 2023, Accepted 12 Sep 2023, Published online: 11 Jan 2024
 

ABSTRACT

Mediterranean rice fields are human-impacted temporary waterbodies filled during summer, a hot period with scarce rains, that are susceptible to biological invasions. These anthropogenic ecosystems have been previously identified as potential gateways for exotic ostracods to colonize nearby wetlands. In this work, we compared the rice field ostracod composition with a shallow lake in a protected Mediterranean wetland (Albufera N2000 site, Eastern Iberian Peninsula). We found 37 ostracod species, 13 of which were considered exotic. Rice fields harbored the highest number of both native and exotic ostracod taxa (16 and 12 species, respectively). Our hypothesis that exotic species were more abundant during summer while native species dominated the community in winter was confirmed by the analysis of temporal changes along the rice field cycle. Comparing the ostracod composition of rice fields with that of the littoral and central parts of the hypertrophic Lake Albufera showed a clear differentiation according to a spatially constrained cluster analysis, with the richest ostracod community corresponding to the rice fields and the lowest species richness to the center of the lake, where vegetation was scarce. Finally, we suggest some criteria for considering an ostracod species as native or exotic when its origin is unknown and discuss the potential origin of the exotic species found, the pathways they might have used to arrive and establish in new areas, and the biological traits that may facilitate the spread of ostracods over new areas after their arrival.

Acknowledgements

We thank the staff responsible of the sampling campaigns, B. Dies (Fundació Assut), G. Valieri (SIPCAM), and SEO/BirdLife (Valencia). We also thank P. Mateache, former director of the Albufera N2000 site; M. Zizlavsky for his assistance in sample processing; and all SEO/BirdLife volunteers for their assistance during sampling campaigns. Giles Miller is greatly thanked for his support during the stay of MB-R at the NHM. The SCSIE microscopy personnel at the University of Valencia are acknowledged for their help with SEM imaging. We are very grateful to the anonymous reviewers for their helpful suggestions on a previous version of the manuscript.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Data availability statement

Data are available from the authors upon reasonable request.

Additional information

Funding

This publication is part of I + D + i project PID2020-112959GB-I00, funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033. This research was also supported by Conselleria de Innovación, Universidades, Ciencia y Sociedad Digital, Generalitat Valenciana (Comunitat Valenciana Government), though the project EXOCRUST (code AICO/2020/182). SEO/BirdLife studies on macroinvertebrate communities in rice fields were funded by Conselleria de Agricultura, Desarrollo Rural, Emergencia Climática y Transición Ecológica (Comunitat Valenciana Government). M. Bisquert-Ribes is recipient of a predoctoral grant (FPU19/02264) founded by (Spanish Government). Further funding was awarded to JR by the València City Council (Ajuntament de València) through projects E-03602-2012-116, E-3602-2013-90, and E-03602-2014-109.

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