Abstract: What would happen in Mediterranean rivers and streams if warming but not drying
occurred? We examined whether the delivery of environmental flows within a warming climate can
maintain suitable macroinvertebrate habitats despite warming. A two-dimensional ecohydraulic
model was used to (1) simulate the influence of water temperature and flow on macroinvertebrates
by calculating habitat suitability for 12 climate change scenarios and (2) identify the mechanism
by which macroinvertebrate assemblages respond to warming. The results suggest that not all
watersheds will be equally influenced by warming. The impact of warming depends on the habitat
conditions before warming occurs. Watersheds can, thus, be categorized as losing (those in which
warming will degrade current optimal thermal habitat conditions) and winning ones (those in which
warming will optimize current sub-optimal thermal habitat conditions, until a given thermal limit).
Our models indicate that in losing watersheds, the delivery of environmental flows can maintain
suitable habitats (and, thus, healthy macroinvertebrate assemblages) for up to 1.8–2.5 C of warming.
In winning watersheds, environmental flows can maintain suitable habitats when thermal conditions
are optimal. Environmental flows could, thus, be used as a proactive strategy/tool to mitigate the
ecological impacts of warming before more expensive reactive measures within a changing climate
become necessary.
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