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research article

Metapopulation capacity of evolving fluvial landscapes

Bertuzzo, Enrico  
•
Rodriguez-Iturbe, Ignacio
•
Rinaldo, Andrea  
2015
Water Resources Research

The form of fluvial landscapes is known to attain stationary network configurations that settle in dynamically accessible minima of total energy dissipation by landscape-forming discharges. Recent studies have highlighted the role of the dendritic structure of river networks in controlling population dynamics of the species they host and large-scale biodiversity patterns. Here, we systematically investigate the relation between energy dissipation, the physical driver for the evolution of river networks, and the ecological dynamics of their embedded biota. To that end, we use the concept of metapopulation capacity, a measure to link landscape structures with the population dynamics they host. Technically, metapopulation capacity is the leading eigenvalue (M) of an appropriate landscape matrix subsuming whether a given species is predicted to persist in the long run. (M) can conveniently be used to rank different landscapes in terms of their capacity to support viable metapopulations. We study how (M) changes in response to the evolving network configurations of spanning trees. Such sequence of configurations is theoretically known to relate network selection to general landscape evolution equations through imperfect searches for dynamically accessible states frustrated by the vagaries of Nature. Results show that the process shaping the metric and the topological properties of river networks, prescribed by physical constraints, leads to a progressive increase in the corresponding metapopulation capacity and therefore on the landscape capacity to support metapopulationswith implications on biodiversity in fluvial ecosystems.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/2015WR016946
Web of Science ID

WOS:000354733500046

Author(s)
Bertuzzo, Enrico  
Rodriguez-Iturbe, Ignacio
Rinaldo, Andrea  
Date Issued

2015

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

Published in
Water Resources Research
Volume

51

Issue

4

Start page

2696

End page

2706

Subjects

riverine landforms

•

spatial ecology

•

networks

•

metapopulation

•

biodiversity

•

ecohydrology

Editorial or Peer reviewed

NON-REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECHO  
Available on Infoscience
June 23, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/115335
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