Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Ecological Indicators journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/ecolind Original Articles Diatoms as tools for inferring ecotone boundaries in a coastal freshwater wetland threatened by saltwater intrusion Viviana Mazzei , Evelyn Gaiser Department of Biological Sciences and Southeast Environmental Research Center, Florida International University, Miami, Florida 33199, USA ARTICLE INFO Keywords: Ecological indicators Diatoms Ecotones Saltwater intrusion Coastal wetlands ABSTRACT Species sorting mechanisms often control community assembly patterns across environmentally heterogeneous landscapes, particularly within microbial communities that respond quickly to environmental variability and are not dispersal-limited on intermediate time scales. In this study, we describe the spatial and seasonal patterns of two key environmental drivers, porewater (PW) conductivity and total phosphorus (TP), in the southern Everglades, FL., USA where saltwater intrusion, caused by rising sea level and hydrologic management, are transforming the natural environmental gradients of this ecological stressor and limiting nutrient. We surveyed diatom assemblages along transects capturing PW conductivity and TP gradients and searched for spatial boundaries in diatom assemblages along each transect. We also determined diatom assemblage thresholds to PW conductivity and TP, and identied signicant indicator taxa with either negative (declining) or positive (in- creasing) relationships to each driver and their individual thresholds. We demonstrate that the southern Everglades exhibits spatially-structured gradients of conductivity and P that are oriented in two dimensions (i.e., with distance from the coast and from west to east) and are often, but not always, positively correlated. Our results show that these gradients drive spatial patterns of compositional similarity among our sampling sites. We found the location of greatest dissimilarity in diatom assemblages for each transect coincided with the upper boundary of the white zone”– the visible ecotone between freshwater and coastal marshes. We did not detect seasonal dierences in the position of the diatom-inferred ecotone as expected, nor did we detect signicant dierences in PW conductivity or TP between wet and dry seasons. Diatom assemblages were highly sensitive to both PW conductivity, with freshwater indicator assemblages declining above 2 mS cm 1 and becoming re- placed by a brackish water assemblage at around 20 mS cm 1 , and periphyton TP, with thresholds at 82 and 285 μg g 1 for negatively- and positively responding taxa, respectively. Our study highlights that small increases in PW conductivity and TP are sucient to cause shifts in the diatom assemblages of the Everglades. As saltwater continues to encroach into this area, compositional changes in this important primary producer assemblage are expected to cascade through the ecosystem and inuence the food web. The diatom indicator taxa and assem- blage thresholds presented here oer a sensitive tool that should continue to be developed and applied to management strategies for saltwater intrusion while its eects can still be mitigated. 1. Introduction The patterns and mechanisms of community assembly are central to ecological theory and have practical applications in employing in- dicator species to detect and predict environmental change. Environmental gradients are often the strongest structuring force be- hind community assembly due to species sorting (i.e., environmental ltering), one of the four paradigms of metacommunity theory (along with neutral theory, mass eects, and patch dynamics; Leibold et al. 2004). Although these four mechanisms of metacommunity structure are not mutually exclusive, species sorting is considered to have the strongest inuence on community assembly in heterogeneous en- vironments and over spatial scales favoring intermediate dispersal (Heino and Soininen 2005; Heino et al., 2015, Leibold et al. 2004, Chase and Myers 2011). Species-sorting along spatially-structured en- vironmental gradients often produce landscape-scale habitat zonation patterns that may include ecotones transitional areas between ad- jacent habitat types that are characterized by rapid species turnover and the presence of species that are at their distributional limits (Walker et al. 2003; Peters et al., 2006; Attrill and Rundle 2002). These characteristics suggest that community response to environmental variability will likely be observed in ecotones rst, making them https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2018.01.003 Received 6 November 2017; Received in revised form 1 January 2018; Accepted 2 January 2018 Corresponding author. E-mail address: vmazz001@u.edu (V. Mazzei). Ecological Indicators 88 (2018) 190–204 1470-160X/ © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. T