Research

Eutrophication and predation mediate zooplankton diversity and network structure

Anthropogenic activities such as eutrophication and fishing have prominent effects on freshwater ecosystems. However, the ways in which ecosystem function and biodiversity respond to multiple drivers from eutrophication and top-down predation remains inconclusive. We studied zooplankton communities in 102 subtropical shallow lakes in the eastern plain of China and further examined the joint effects of nutrient enrichment and predation on biodiversity and ecological networks. We found that alpha diversity was negatively influenced by nutrient conditions (such as total phosphorus and total nitrogen [TN]), whereas beta diversity (β-diversity) was positively related to nutrients and was also structured by omnivorous fish showing a unimodal pattern. Furthermore, the network skewness of zooplankton increased with nutrient enrichment, especially TN, and was negatively related to omnivorous fish. This skewness is more sensitive than β-diversity, whereas negative skew is primarily caused by omnivorous fish. Our results demonstrated that top-down effects were dominant for zooplankton communities and resulted in structural adjustment of zooplankton communities, mainly with an increase in fish predation. A negative skewed network indicates the presence of more generalist species and stronger connections among the zooplankton assemblages, as well as decreased β-diversity. Yun Li,Rong Wang,Haojie Su,Jianjun Wang,Ping Xie,Feizhou Chen. Eutrophication and predation mediate zooplankton diversity and network structure. Limnology and Oceanography. https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.11957.