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Leaf‐litter breakdown in pasture and deciduous woodland streams: a comparison among three European regions
Authors:SALLY HLADYZ  SCOTT D TIEGS  MARK O GESSNER  PAUL S GILLER  GETA RÎŞNOVEANU  ELENA PREDA  MARIUS NISTORESCU  MARKUS SCHINDLER  GUY WOODWARD
Institution:1. Environmental Research Institute, Department of Zoology, Ecology & Plant Science, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland;2. Present address: CSIRO Land and Water, The Murray‐Darling Freshwater Research Centre, PO Box 991, Wodonga, Victoria, 3689, Australia.;3. Department of Aquatic Ecology, Eawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, überlandstrasse, Dübendorf;4. Institute of Integrative Biology (IBZ), ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;5. Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, Oakland University, Rochester, Michigan, 48309, U.S.A.;6. Department of Systems Ecology and Sustainability, University of Bucharest, Splaiul Indepedentei, Bucharest, Romania;7. School of Biological & Chemical Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, London, U.K.
Abstract:1. Human land‐use has altered catchments on a large scale in most parts of the world, with one of the most profound changes relevant for streams and rivers being the widespread clearance of woody riparian vegetation to make way for livestock grazing pasture. Increasingly, environmental legislation, such as the EU Water Framework Directive (EU WFD), calls for bioassessment tools that can detect such anthropogenic impacts on ecosystem functioning. 2. We conducted a large‐scale field experiment in 30 European streams to quantify leaf‐litter breakdown, a key ecosystem process, in streams whose riparian zones and catchments had been cleared for pasture compared with those in native deciduous woodland. The study encompassed a west–east gradient, from Ireland to Switzerland to Romania, with each of the three countries representing a distinct region. We used coarse‐mesh and fine‐mesh litter bags (10 and 0.5 mm, respectively) to assess total, microbial and, by difference, macroinvertebrate‐mediated breakdown. 3. Overall, total breakdown rates did not differ between land‐use categories, but in some regions macroinvertebrate‐mediated breakdown was higher in deciduous woodland streams, whereas microbial breakdown was higher in pasture streams. This result suggests that overall ecosystem functioning is maintained by compensatory increases in microbial activity in pasture streams. 4. We suggest that simple coefficients of breakdown rates on their own often might not be powerful enough as a bioassessment tool for detecting differences related to land‐use such as riparian vegetation removal. However, shifts in the relative contributions to breakdown by microbial decomposers versus invertebrate detritivores, as revealed by the ratios of their associated breakdown rate coefficients, showed clear responses to land‐use.
Keywords:agricultural streams  decomposition  functional ecosystem integrity  land‐use change  Water Framework Directive
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