Dissertação
Influência de fatores ambientais de ampla escala na distribuição espacial de moluscos límnicos
Fecha
2014-02-14Registro en:
AMARAL, Aline Monique Blank do. INFLUENCE OF LARGE SCALE ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS ON THE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF FRESHWATER MOLLUSKS. 2014. 92 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Ciencias Biológicas) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2014.
Autor
Amaral, Aline Monique Blank do
Institución
Resumen
This dissertation presents unique approaches about the influence of environmental variables at
different spatial scales (meso and macro regional temperature, rainfall and altitude) (1), and
aquatic and terrestrial factors on a large scale (2) on the spatial distribution of Brazilian
freshwater malacofauna. The study was conducted through meta-analysis, based on
distribution data of gastropods and bivalves communities from the existing literature.
According to the taxonomic composition, 35 localities from 33 previous studies were selected
under certain criteria to minimize specifically sampling deviations. As some studies had
focused exclusively on one mollusk class, from all the localities, 27 were used for gastropods
communities analysis and 22 for bivalves. Environmental information was obtained from
geospatial data. The similarity between gastropods and bivalves communities was represented
by a Cluster analysis (WPGMA) and possible graphic distortions were evaluated by
Coefficient of Cophenetic Correlation (r). Through a Mantel test, spatial autocorrelation was
observed for both communities (r = 0.21, P = 0.02 for gastropods, and r = 0.425, P = 0.0002
for bivalves). Thus, a partial Mantel test was used, comparing the similarity matrixes and the
environmental ones removing the geographic distance effect. The Bonferroni s correction was
considered due to possible biases arising from sample variability. The dendrogram
demonstrated the formation of 4 and 6 small groups, of bivalves and gastropods, respectively,
with similarity greater than 50%. The Köppen s climate region had a significant positive
correlation with both communities in both approaches (1) (2) despite the space issue.
Environmental variables in macro scale (Köppen s climate region and rainfall range) were
important in the distribution of gastropods and bivalves. At meso-scale, only altitude had a
strong relationship with the bivalves communities. However, despite the obvious influence of
the space, terrestrial variables (Köppen s climate region, biome and vegetal formation) had a
stronger correlation with the bivalves communities than aquatic ones (hydrographic region
and aquatic ecosystem). In addition, the aquatic ecosystem (e.g., lake, river), in this case, was
not affected by space. For gastropods communities, in addition to strong correlation with
Köppen s climate region, there was some relationship with hydrographic region, but this
vanished when the effect of distance was removed. The results of this study indicate that the
development of protection strategies for the freshwater malacofauna should consider
macrovariables as Köppen s climate region, biome and even altitude, and the integrity of
limnic ecosystems should also be included in conservation programs.