Currently, how estuarine biomes respond to river regulation has become a globally concerned issue, yet the assembly mechanisms shaping diversity patterns and species coexistence in estuarine macrobenthos following such events are poorly understood. To address this gap, we applied a suite of multi-scale approaches, integrating spatial variation partitioning, β diversity decomposition, as well as niche and network theories, to dissect community shifts across a typical artificial flood event in the Yellow River Estuary. Results revealed this event fundamentally reconfigured the assembly rules, biogeographic structure, and coexistence architecture of estuarine macrobenthic communities through a tripartite mechanistic response: (i) environmental filtering strengthened as a selective sieve (pure environmental fraction increasing from 21.15% to 30.49%), while stochastic processes, particularly ecological drift, simultaneously gained prominence (unexplained variation rising from 15.00% to 24.37%); (ii) a consequent spatial decoupling that fractures the estuarine continuum into a high-turnover near-estuary and a buffered, high-similarity far-estuary; and (iii) the emergence of divergent coexistence architectures within these regions from structured niche partitioning in the far-estuary to modular networks of opportunistic annelids in the near-estuary. Our work elucidates how artificial floods reconfigure estuarine macrobenthos communities by shifting assembly rules, leading to a more fragmented community structure. These findings provide a critical mechanistic basis for informing adaptive management strategies to address ecological challenges posed by river management and climate change. • Artificial flood intensifies environmental filtering (21% to 30%) while amplifying ecological drift (15% to 24%), resetting estuarine assembly rules. • This drives spatial decoupling, with the near-estuary characterized by high turnover and the far-estuary maintaining high similarity ( β T , 0.54 to 1.13). • Coexistence becomes fragmented, with connected molluscan networks in the far-estuary and modular annelid-dominated networks in the near-estuary. • Flood disturbance reconfigures macrobenthic assembly and biogeographic patterns, requiring spatially explicit management to sustain estuarine ecological integrity.
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Debin Sun
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Qinglu Fu
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Linlin Chen
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Global Ecology and Conservation
Chinese Academy of Sciences
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
Shanghai Ocean University
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Sun et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d892d16c1944d70ce040d9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gecco.2026.e04192
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