Title
Uncovering patterns of freshwater positive interactions using meta-analysis: Identifying the roles of common participants, invasive species and environmental context
Date Issued
01 March 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
review
Author(s)
Albertson L.K.
MacDonald M.J.
Tumolo B.B.
Briggs M.A.
Maguire Z.
Quinn S.
Sanchez-Ruiz J.A.
Burkle L.A.
Montana State University
Publisher(s)
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Positive interactions are sensitive to human activities, necessitating synthetic approaches to elucidate broad patterns and predict future changes if these interactions are altered or lost. General understanding of freshwater positive interactions has been far outpaced by knowledge of these important relationships in terrestrial and marine ecosystems. We conducted a global meta-analysis to evaluate the magnitude of positive interactions across freshwater habitats. In 340 studies, we found substantial positive effects, with facilitators increasing beneficiaries by, on average, 81% across all taxa and response variables. Mollusks in particular were commonly studied as both facilitators and beneficiaries. Amphibians were one group benefiting the most from positive interactions, yet few studies investigated amphibians. Invasive facilitators had stronger positive effects on beneficiaries than non-invasive facilitators. We compared positive effects between high- and low-stress conditions and found no difference in the magnitude of benefit in the subset of studies that manipulated stressors. Future areas of research include understudied facilitators and beneficiaries, the stress gradient hypothesis, patterns across space or time and the influence of declining taxa whose elimination would jeopardise fragile positive interaction networks. Freshwater positive interactions occur among a wide range of taxa, influence populations, communities and ecosystem processes and deserve further exploration.
Start page
594
End page
607
Volume
24
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ecología
Ciencias naturales
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85098181835
PubMed ID
Source
Ecology Letters
ISSN of the container
1461023X
Sponsor(s)
We thank L. Calle, W. Cross and E. Scholl for discussion and constructive feedback during manuscript development. Three reviewers provided comments that greatly improved the manuscript. Funding was provided for LKA, MJM and BBT in part by the National Science Foundation (DEB 1556684) and Montana State University. Funding for MAB was provided in part by The National Park Service (P17AC01089).
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus