The browser you are using is not supported by this website. All versions of Internet Explorer are no longer supported, either by us or Microsoft (read more here: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/windows/end-of-ie-support).

Please use a modern browser to fully experience our website, such as the newest versions of Edge, Chrome, Firefox or Safari etc.

Pedro Rosero. Photo.

Pedro Rosero

Doctoral student

Pedro Rosero. Photo.

Multi-taxa colonisation along the foreland of a vanishing equatorial glacier

Author

  • Pedro Rosero
  • Verónica Crespo-Pérez
  • Rodrigo Espinosa
  • Patricio Andino
  • Álvaro Barragán
  • Pierre Moret
  • Mauro Gobbi
  • Gentile Francesco Ficetola
  • Ricardo Jaramillo
  • Priscilla Muriel
  • Fabien Anthelme
  • Dean Jacobsen
  • Olivier Dangles
  • Thomas Condom
  • Ludovic Gielly
  • Jérôme Poulenard
  • Antoine Rabatel
  • Rubén Basantes
  • Bolívar Cáceres Correa
  • Sophie Cauvy-Fraunié

Summary, in English

Retreating glaciers, icons of climate change, release new potential habitats for both aquatic and terrestrial organisms. High-elevation species are threatened by temperature increases and the upward migration of lowlands species. Improving our understanding of successional processes after glacier retreat becomes urgent, especially in the tropics, where glacier shrinkage is particularly fast. We examined the successional patterns of aquatic invertebrates, ground beetles, terrestrial plants, soil eukaryotes (algae, invertebrates, plants) in an equatorial glacier foreland (Carihuairazo, Ecuador). Based on both taxonomical identification and eDNA metabarcoding, we analysed the effects of both environmental conditions and age of deglacierization on community composition. Except for algae, diversity increased with time since deglacierization, especially among passive dispersers, suggesting that dispersal was a key driver structuring the glacier foreland succession. Spatial β-diversity was mainly attributed to nestedness for aquatic invertebrates, terrestrial plants and soil algae, likely linked to low environmental variability within the studied glacier foreland; and to turnover for soil invertebrates, suggesting competition exclusion at the oldest successional stage. Pioneer communities were dominated by species exhibiting flexible feeding strategies and high dispersal ability (mainly transported by wind), probably colonising from lower altitudes, or from the glacier in the case of algae. Overall, glacier foreland colonisation in the tropics exhibit common characteristics to higher latitudes. High-elevation species are nevertheless threatened, as the imminent extinction of many tropical glaciers will affect species associated to glacier-influenced habitats but also prevent cold-adapted and hygrophilous species from using these habitats as refuges in a warming world.

Publishing year

2021-07

Language

English

Pages

1010-1021

Publication/Series

Ecography

Volume

44

Issue

7

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Topic

  • Ecology

Keywords

  • early succession
  • equatorial glacier foreland
  • glacier retreat
  • multiple-taxa

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0906-7590