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Size structure of the metazoan community in a Piedmont stream
Authors:N. LeRoy Poff  Margaret A. Palmer  Paul L. Angermeier  Robert L. Vadas Jr.  Christine C. Hakenkamp  Alexa Bely  Peter Arensburger  Andrew P. Martin
Affiliation:(1) Department of Zoology, University of Maryland, 20742-4415 College Park, MD, USA;(2) U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 24061-0321 Blacksburg, VA, USA;(3) Department of Fisheries & Wildlife Sciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 24061-0321 Blacksburg, VA, USA;(4) Present address: Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, State University of New York, 11794-5245 Stony Brook, NY, USA
Abstract:We characterized the size structure of virtually the entire metazoan community in a fourth order, sandybottomed Piedmont stream during late summer. Our study, the first to sample across all habitat types and sizes of metazoans in an aquatic ecosystem, indicates that at the community level, stream size spectra may be bimodal for the benthos or trimodal when fish are included. Animals spanning 10 orders of magnitude in dry mass (from gastrotrichs to fish) were quantitatively collected from nine habitat types. The bimodal benthic size spectrum was characterized by a meiofaunal component (mostly oligochaetes and micro-crustacea) and a macrobenthic component (mostly the introduced asiatic clam, Corbicula fluminea). Insects contributed little to overall standing crop. Size-specific contribution to whole-community metabolism was assessed using allometric equations for respiration, and we found a distinctly bimodal distribution across the entire metazoan size range, with peaks in the meiofaunal and benthic macrofaunal size ranges. Our bimodal benthic size spectrum is similar to that observed for marine benthos but not to other freshwater benthic systems, possibly because the entire range of habitat types and/or animal sizes were not sampled in the latter. Numerous factors may influence size spectra in stream ecosystems, including local geomorphic (habitat) conditions, water level fluctuations, species introductions, and predation processes.
Keywords:Body size  Size spectrum  Community structure  Energy flow  Aquatic ecology
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