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1.
Many communities comprise species that select resources that are patchily distributed in an environment that is otherwise unsuitable or suboptimal. Effects of this patchiness can depend on the characteristics of patch arrays and animal movements, and produce non-intuitive outcomes in which population densities are unrelated to resource abundance. Resource mosaics are predicted to have only weak effects, however, where patches are ephemeral or organisms are transported advectively. The running waters of streams and benthic invertebrates epitomize such systems, but empirical tests of resource mosaics are scarce. We sampled 15 common macroinvertebrates inhabiting distinct detritus patches at four sites within a sand-bed stream, where detritus formed a major resource of food and living space. At each site, environmental variables were measured for 100 leaf packs; invertebrates were counted in 50 leaf packs. Sites differed in total abundance of detritus, leaf pack sizes and invertebrate densities. Multivariate analysis indicated that patch size was the dominant environmental variable, but invertebrate densities differed significantly between sites even after accounting for patch size. Leaf specialists showed positive and strong density–area relationships, except where the patch size range was small and patches were aggregated. In contrast, generalist species had weaker and variable responses to patch sizes. Population densities were not associated with total resource abundance, with the highest densities of leaf specialists in sites with the least detritus. Our results demonstrate that patchy resources can affect species even in communities where species are mobile, have advective dispersal, and patches are relatively ephemeral.  相似文献   

2.
1. We conducted a new single‐site study and a meta‐analysis of pre‐existing studies from multiple streams to assess whether intraspecific aggregation among leaf packs promotes coexistence among leaf‐eating invertebrates (shredders) in Swedish streams. 2. In the single‐site study, 48 standardised leaf bags were exposed for 1 month for shredder colonisation in a homogeneous glide of a forested stream. Current velocity, water depth and substratum composition were additionally assessed to investigate how these factors affected shredder distributions. 3. The meta‐analysis included information on shredder colonisation of leaf packs from seven other studies of detritus decomposition to assess patterns of aggregation. Intra‐ and interspecific aggregation and their relative strength were assessed using indices (J, C and A respectively) originally developed for terrestrial insects also dependent on patchy and ephemeral resources. 4. In both parts of the study, intraspecific aggregation was much stronger than interspecific aggregation, which was weak overall, indicating that the conditions under which aggregation is expected to facilitate coexistence were fulfilled in our shredder assemblages. 5. In the single‐site study, shredder abundances were weakly associated with environmental variables suggesting that habitat heterogeneity only partly explains aggregation patterns. 6. Our results strongly suggest that shredder diversity in streams, particularly during periods of leaf limitation (such as might occur in spring), is promoted by the aggregation of individual species among patches of resource.  相似文献   

3.
Leaf-pack dynamics in a southern African mountain stream   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
SUMMARY 1. The occurrence, composition and invertebrate fauna of naturally-occurring leaf packs were studied over 24 months in Langrivier, a second-order mountain stream in the south-western Cape, South Africa. Langrivier is shallow and fast-flowing and stores very low levels of allochthonous detritus, although natural leaf packs form an obvious part of the energy base in the stream throughout the year. 2. The occurrence and size of the packs were influenced mainly by stream discharge and by the timing and character of leaf fall from riparian trees. Packs were smallest (minimum dry mass 17 g, minimum volume 1.7–10?5 m3) in winter when discharge was high, and largest (maximum dry mass 191 g, maximum volume 4.2–10?3 m3) in spring when discharge decreased and leaf fall from the evergreen riparian trees began. Through the year the packs covered a mean 0.41 % of the stream bed and had a mean abundance of 0.46 packs m?2 of stream bed. They were ephemeral, lasting on average <1.7 months and yet accounted for 29% of the stored detritus in the system. Wood was the dominant component of packs, and leaves at ali stages of decomposition were present throughout the year. 3. The ratio of numbers of invertebrates in packs: numbers of individuals in the benthos was very low (0.002–0.030), presumably because of the rarity and small size of the packs. Nevertheless, the density of invertebrates per unit area covered by leaf packs was consistently much higher than the density in an equivalent area of the benthos, except during peak leaf fall (October to December). 4. Experiments were undertaken with artificial leaf packs in order to determine the extent to which these simulated natural packs. Although both natural and artificial leaf packs contained a high proportion of Plecoptera (46% and 29% respectively), the natural packs contained high numbers of simuliid larvae (33% of total), whereas artificial packs had a high percentage of chironomid larvae (62%), Several other taxa regularly occurred in both types of pack but in very low numbers. In addition,  相似文献   

4.
1. An experimental field study examined the aggregation of stream macroinvertebrates associated with leaf packs over different spatial scales (several metres–km) (extent), at different patch sizes (grain) and temporal scales (2 and 4 weeks). 2. Standardized leaf packs were constructed and set in eighteen blocks of nine equally spaced packs in glide areas over a 2 km stretch of a wooded stream. The distribution of macroinvertebrates colonizing the artificial leaf packs was investigated to examine the extent of both intraspecific and interspecific aggregation across leaf packs. 3. All major colonizing taxa were intraspecifically aggregated across the leaf packs. Aggregation decreased with increasing patch size (grain) (from pack to block), and also decreased with decreasing spatial extent (from 2 km stretch to within-block scale) with patch size held constant. Interspecific associations among all major taxa were not common on most occasions at the short temporal scale, although the proportion of significant associations tended to increase somewhat over time and with spatial scale, but did not exceed 42% of all possible associations. The vast majority of significant associations were positive rather than negative. 4. The influence of heterogeneity in a number of environmental variables measured for each leaf pack (accumulated detritus and sediment, leaf mass, flow and depth) on the distribution of invertebrates was considered, but this could only partially explain the variation in macroinvertebrate abundance across leaf packs. 5. The roles of intrinsic aggregation and stochastic processes were examined as alternative explanations for the distribution patterns observed. It is apparent from this study that intrinsic aggregation, in concert with resource partitioning, influences the community structure of stream macroinvertebrates associated with leaf packs. These findings may also have implications for the distribution of taxa in the benthos as a whole.  相似文献   

5.
1. The influence of coarse substratum and flow, coarse substratum and food, and predation risk and flow on habitat use by Gammarus pulex was studied in three experiments conducted in artificial stream channels. Each stream channel consisted of a riffle and pool habitat.
2. Location of coarse substrata and food was manipulated by placing cobbles (coarse substratum) and leaf packs (food) in different habitats. Predation risk was varied by running experiments in the presence and absence of sculpins ( Cottus gobio ), and flow was varied by pumping water with one or two pumps.
3. In all experiments Gammarus were most abundant in pools but placement of cobbles in riffles increased use of the latter. An even greater percentage of Gammarus used riffles if leaf packs were also placed there. Decreased discharge and the presence of sculpins ( Cottus gobio ) also caused Gammarus to increase use of riffles. These data indicate that Gammarus is able to evaluate differences in habitat quality and respond accordingly.  相似文献   

6.
1. The influence of coarse substratum and flow, coarse substratum and food, and predation risk and flow on habitat use by Gammarus pulex was studied in three experiments conducted in artificial stream channels. Each stream channel consisted of a riffle and pool habitat.
2. Location of coarse substrata and food was manipulated by placing cobbles (coarse substratum) and leaf packs (food) in different habitats. Predation risk was varied by running experiments in the presence and absence of sculpins ( Cottus gobio ), and flow was varied by pumping water with one or two pumps.
3. In all experiments Gammarus were most abundant in pools but placement of cobbles in riffles increased use of the latter. An even greater percentage of Gammarus used riffles if leaf packs were also placed there. Decreased discharge and the presence of sculpins ( Cottus gobio ) also caused Gammarus to increase use of riffles. These data indicate that Gammarus is able to evaluate differences in habitat quality and respond accordingly.  相似文献   

7.
Rouse  Greg W. 《Hydrobiologia》2005,549(1):167-178
This paper provides data on fine particulate organic matter (FPOM) and macroinvertebrates associated to natural and artificial leaf packs in a small woodland stream (Schlaube, Brandenburg). Macroinvertebrate colonisation and the dynamics of FPOM were studied in oven-dried alder leaf packs, air-dried alder leaf packs and packs with artificial leafshaped substrate exposed in the stream during a 68-day period. The importance of FPOM as a potential food source for macroinvertebrates especially in artificial leaf packs was evaluated. Changes in the quantity as well as in the chemical composition of the accumulating FPOM (>63 and <63 μm) was determined using soluble carbohydrates, proteins and chlorophyll a as parameters of the nutritional quality. Mass loss and the chemical changes of alder leaves during the decompositional process were also described. The loss of soluble carbohydrates due to leaching was more rapid in oven-dried alder leaf packs than in air-dried ones. After 3 days of leaf pack exposure weight loss of oven-dried and air-dried leaf packs was nearly comparable, as the similar decay coefficients, k = 0.0228 (oven-dried leaf packs) and k = 0.0214 (air-dried leaf packs), respectively, show. The amount of FPOM per unit leaf area constantly increased in artificial packs, although it remained below that of alder leaf packs at all sampling dates. The nutritional quality of FPOM <63 μm was constantly greater than that of FPOM >63 μm and decreased in both size-fractions with length of exposure. Referring to leaf area the abundance of macroinvertebrates continually increased in all packs till the end of exposure, whereas the numbers in artificial packs remained below that in alder leaf packs. The taxonomic composition of all treatments was very similar with Gammarus pulex being the most abundant taxon in all packs until day 42, while afterwards the caddis fly genus Hydropsyche gained in importance. The amphipod Gammarus pulex in general did not show a preference for air-dried alder leaf packs compared to oven-dried alder leaf and artificial packs. Corresponding dynamics of macroinvertebrate colonisation and FPOM content in artificial packs support the hypothesis that FPOM functions not only as an important food source for macroinvertebrates including gammarideans but also as a control mechanism of macroinvertebrate abundance in stream habitats. Even if the accumulation of FPOM and drifting macroinvertebrates might be influenced by the same abiotic factor (e.g. by reduction in stream velocity inside the packs) it is quite unlikely that only physical properties caused the invertebrates to stay.  相似文献   

8.
1. Few studies have assessed the effects of macroconsumers, such as fishes and shrimps, on detritus and detritivores.
2. We used an underwater electric field to prevent macroconsumers from feeding in and on leaf packs in a lowland stream in Costa Rica and thus to determine their effects on the density of insect detritivores and decay rates of leaves.
3. Exclusion of macroconsumers resulted in significantly higher densities of small invertebrates inhabiting leaf packs. Most of these were collector–gatherers, none were shredders.
4. Despite the increase in invertebrate density, decay rates of leaves were not statistically different. These findings contrast with results from temperate streams showing that increases in the density of invertebrates in leaf packs typically result in an increased rate of decay.
5. Leaf decay rates and invertebrate densities were also compared between leaf packs placed in electric exclusion treatments and those placed in coarse (2 cm) plastic net bags (as used in many previous studies). Our results suggest that using such netting in tropical streams may deter macroconsumers, which can affect insect density and, potentially, decay rates of organic matter.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of salmon carcasses on dissolved nutrients, epilithic production, leaf decomposition rates, and aquatic invertebrates were examined using 10-m-long artificial channels fed by an adjacent natural stream in Hokkaido, northern Japan. Bags containing maple leaf litter were placed in nine channels, each of which was assigned to one of three treatments with three replicates, for 6 weeks in fall 2002. The three treatments were: (1) salmon carcasses+invertebrates, (2) invertebrates only, and (3) control (no salmon carcasses or invertebrates added). Nutrient concentrations, biomass of epilithic algae (chlorophyll), leaf weight loss, abundance and biomass of invertebrates in the leaf packs were compared among the three treatments at 14, 27, and 40 days after the beginning of the experiment. The NH4+ in stream water and chlorophyll concentrations of epilithic algae were higher in the salmon treatment than the other treatments, and the maple leaves decomposed faster in the salmon treatment than in the other treatments. Moreover, the N content of the leaves was highest and the C/N ratio was lowest in the salmon treatment, although not significantly so. The abundance and biomass of the dominant leaf-shredding invertebrate Goerodes satoi did not differ between the first two treatments. However, the stable N isotope ratio in G. satoi was nearly 3 higher in the salmon treatment, suggesting that around 20% of salmon-derived N was taken up by this shredder. Our results indicate that salmon carcasses affect stream ecosystems directly by enhancing primary production, indirectly by accelerating woody leaf decomposition, and finally by incorporating into the food web primary consumers that utilize fertilized woody leaves.  相似文献   

10.
Packs of autumn-shed maple leaves were placed at coal ash effluent-exposed and reference sites in streams on December 5, 1977 and removed after 27 and 96 days. Leaf surface area (cm2/leaf) and disc weight (ash-free dry wt/15 mm disc) were greater at the effluent-exposed site than at the reference site after 96 days (p < .001). ATP content of leaves from the reference stream quadrupled between 27 and 96 days while ATP content of effluent-exposed leaves remained low. Macroinvertebrates colonized the leaf packs in the reference site but were not found on or in effluent-exposed packs. We concluded that leaf processing beyond the leaching of soluble organics did not occur in the effluent-exposed packs owing to reduced colonization and decomposition by fungi. Since stream invertebrates prefer decomposed leaf material and animals grow faster on leaves colonized by microbes, the ash effuent appears to indirectly affect macroinvertebrates by interfering with leaf decomposition and thus reducing the quality of their food.  相似文献   

11.
Recent theoretical advances in food web ecology emphasize the importance of body size disparities among species for the structure, stability and functions of ecosystems. Experimental confirmations of the functional importance of large species, independent of their trophic position, are scarce. We specifically examine the multiple ecological roles of large invertebrates from two distinct trophic levels in headwater streams. We experimentally manipulated the presence of large predatory invertebrates (two Perlid stoneflies) or detritivores (a limnephilid caddisfly and a Pteronarcys stonefly) in a two‐by‐two design in stream channels open to immigration/emigration of smaller biota. We assessed treatment effects on the trophic structure of the benthic invertebrate community, dynamics of basal resources (benthic algae and leaf litter of cedar and alder), and stability of litter decomposition rates against an experimental pulse perturbation (fine sediment input). The presence of the large invertebrates was associated with a ten‐fold decrease in the biomass of invertebrate filterers whereas other trophic groups were unaffected by the large species. The biomass of benthic algae was lower and the rate of mass loss of alder litter was higher in channels lacking the large predators, thus revealing trophic cascades operating along both algal‐based and detritus‐based food chains. The large predators had no detectable effect on the decomposition of cedar whereas both cedar and alder disappeared faster in the presence of the large detritivores. Furthermore, the large predators and large detritivores interactively influenced the decomposition of the cedar–alder mixture through a litter diversity effect and the variability of the rate of alder decomposition after a pulse of fine sediment. Because the large invertebrates affected multiple ecosystem properties, and as their absence was not rapidly compensated for by small immigrant species, our findings support the notion that large species could be critically important in controlling ecosystem structure and functioning.  相似文献   

12.
 Because cannibals are potentially both predator and prey, the presence of conspecifics and alternative prey may act together to influence the rate at which cannibals prey upon each other or emigrate from a habitat patch. Wolf spiders (Lycosidae) are cannibalistic-generalist predators that hunt for prey with a sit-and-wait strategy characterized by changes in foraging site. Little information is available on how both prey abundance and the presence of conspecifics influence patch quality for these cursorial, non-web-building spiders. To address this question, laboratory experiments were conducted with spiderlings and older juveniles of the lycosid genus Schizocosa. The presence of insect prey consistently reduced rates of spider emigration when spiders were housed either alone or in groups. Solitary juvenile Schizocosa that had been recently collected from the field exhibited a median giving-up time (GUT) of 10 h in the absence of prey (Collembola); providing Collembola increased the median GUT to 64 h. For solitary spiders, the absence of prey increased by about fourfold the rate of emigration during the first 24 h. In contrast, for spiders in patches with a high density of conspecifics, the absence of prey increased the 24-h emigration rate by only 1.6-fold. For successful cannibals in the no-prey patches, the presence of conspecifics improved patch quality by providing a source of food. Mortality by cannibalism was affected by both prey availability and openness of the patch to net emigration. In patches with no net emigration, the presence of prey reduced rates of cannibalism from 79% to 57%. Spiders in patches open to emigration but not immigration experienced a rate of cannibalism (16%) that was independent of prey availability. The results of these experiments indicate that for a cannibalistic forager such as the wolf spider Schizocosa, (1) the presence of conspecifics can improve average patch quality when prey are absent, and (2) cannibalism has the potential to be a significant mortality factor under natural field conditions because cannibalism persisted in prey patches that were open to emigration. Received: 12 April 1996 / Accepted: 14 August 1996  相似文献   

13.
Imre I  Grant JW  Keeley ER 《Oecologia》2004,138(3):371-378
Optimal territory size models predict a decrease in territory size with increasing food abundance. However, most of these models may not be applicable to juvenile salmonids in streams, because they defend contiguous territories at high densities. The optimal size of a contiguous territory is predicted to (1) be independent of food abundance when food is rare and (2) decrease only when food abundance is high enough to induce a reduction in territory size below the contiguous optimum. To test these predictions, we raised equal densities of juvenile steelhead trout in outdoor stream channels over a 32-fold range of food abundance in the absence of emigration for 25 days. Increasing competition for scarce food resulted in increasing mortality, higher willingness to emigrate, higher variance in body mass, lower growth, lower population density and lower biomass. The size of territories decreased with increasing local population density, and increased with increasing body size. However, territory size did not change with food abundance, a result consistent with the prediction of a contiguous territory size model. On average, total salmonid biomass increased 5.7 times in response to the 32-fold increase in food abundance. Our data provide strong support for an earlier quantitative relationship between the abundance of stream salmonids and their food.  相似文献   

14.
N. Usio 《Oecologia》2000,124(4):608-614
I performed a field experiment to test the hypotheses that omnivorous crayfish both promote breakdown of leaves (basal resources) and decouple any potential trophic cascade by simultaneously affecting intermediate consumers as well as their basal resource. Leaf packs were placed inside in situ artificial channels, which excluded or allowed access to crayfish. During a 4-week period, crayfish greatly promoted leaf processing, with decomposition rates among the fastest ever recorded from temperate streams. Crayfish also affected invertebrate abundance in the leaf packs. As a result of resource consumption, predation and bioturbation, crayfish treatments contained significantly lower densities of invertebrates. In contrast, exclusion of crayfish did not promote leaf decay via increased colonisation by detritivores, primarily because of the conspicuous lack of shredder insects in New Zealand streams. The results support the hypothesis that omnivorous top consumers decouple cascading chains through simultaneous direct and indirect effects on intermediate consumers and basal resources. Decapod consumers, which have been largely ignored in leaf decomposition studies, can be key leaf processors in temperate streams where shredder insects are poorly represented. Received: 8 February 2000 / Accepted: 14 April 2000  相似文献   

15.
Nematomorph parasites manipulate crickets to enter streams where the parasites reproduce. These manipulated crickets become a substantial food subsidy for stream fishes. We used a field experiment to investigate how this subsidy affects the stream community and ecosystem function. When crickets were available, predatory fish ate fewer benthic invertebrates. The resulting release of the benthic invertebrate community from fish predation indirectly decreased the biomass of benthic algae and slightly increased leaf break-down rate. This is the first experimental demonstration that host manipulation by a parasite can reorganise a community and alter ecosystem function. Nematomorphs are common, and many other parasites have dramatic effects on host phenotypes, suggesting that similar effects of parasites on ecosystems might be widespread.  相似文献   

16.
Enhancing litter retention in streams   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
1. Dobson & Hildrew (1992) enhanced leaf litter retention in four streams by placing small plastic leaf traps in manipulated stretches. Litter standing crop and the local abundance of shredders was increased, relative to control stretches, in all sites save one which was naturally highly retentive. These results could indicate food limitation in these detritivores, but might have occurred in response to an altered hydraulic regime or increased habitat availability. 2. Shear stress was characterized in the four streams manipulated by Dobson & Hildrew (1992). This was carried out on three occasions in both the manipulated and control stretches of each stream. While there was evidence that the manipulation of retention did influence near-bed flows, these changes were not consistent enough to explain the response of shredding invertebrates to experimental manipulation. 3. In a further experiment, we exposed real and artificial leaves to colonization by invertebrates. Shredders, collectors and predators all colonized real leaves in preference to plastic substitutes. 4. These results support the hypothesis that detritivorous macroinvertebrates exploit aggregations of leaf litter primarily as sources of food, rather than as habitat or habitat modifier.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of leaf species composition on decomposition patterns was examined in a coastal plain stream. Red maple leaves (Acer rubrum) decomposed at the same rate separately or when mixed with cypress leaves (Taxodium distichum). Cypress addition increased structural integrity but its effects differed between sites with different hydrologic regimes. Invertebrate communities varied slightly between mixed and single species packs, however invertebrates did not appear to be the primary agent of decomposition. Mixed species packs may be an alternative method to fine mesh bags for studying processing of small, narrow leaves in a more realistic manner.  相似文献   

18.
Bioturbation can affect community structure by influencing resource distribution and habitat heterogeneity. Bioturbation by detritivores in small headwater streams could affect community structure by reintroducing buried detrital resources into the food web and could also affect the distribution of various taxa on detritus. We evaluated the ability of the caddisfly Pycnopsyche gentilis to uncover experimentally buried leaves in a headwater stream. Packs of leaves were placed in enclosures and covered with a known volume of sediment. We added 0, 3 or 6 large Pycnopsyche to the enclosures which were permeable to most other invertebrate taxa. Leaf packs were sampled after 23 days and leaf pack mass, the amount of sediment covering the leaf packs, and macro‐ and microinvertebrate densities on leaf packs were quantified. There was a significant negative relationship between Pycnopsyche density and leaf pack mass. Pycnopsyche also reduced the volume of sediment covering leaf packs. Pycnopsyche had complex effects on the abundance of invertebrate taxa associated with the leaves. Some taxa exhibited their highest abundance in the 3 Pycnopsyche treatment while others exhibited non‐significant increases as Pycnopsyche density increased. These results suggest that the beneficial effects of Pycnopsyche (e.g. uncovering leaves which increases the availability of habitat and food) outweigh any negative effects (e.g. disturbance, encounter competition) of the caddisfly when it is present at lower densities. However, the negative impacts of Pycnopsyche appear to outweigh the positive effects via sediment removal at higher caddisfly densities for some taxa. Our results suggest that bioturbating organisms in streams have the potential to reintroduce organic matter to detrital food webs and affect the distribution and abundance of benthic taxa associated with organic matter.  相似文献   

19.
We studied the decomposition process and macroinvertebrate colonisation of leaf packs to determine to what extent leaf consumption and invertebrate abundance depend on the pollution level, season, leaf type and patch size. We exposed 400 leaf packs made of two leaf types, alder and chestnut, at two sites of the Erro River (NW Italy) with different environmental alteration levels. Leaf packs were set out as three patch sizes (alone, or in groups of 6 or 12). A first experiment was carried out in winter and a second in summer. Leaf packs were retrieved after 15, 30, 45 and 60 days of submersion to determine the leaf mass loss and to quantify the associated macroinvertebrates. Natural riverbed invertebrates were collected in the same areas. Patch size, season, leaf type and pollution level significantly affected mass loss. The breakdown process was faster for alder leaves, during summer, at the unpolluted site, and in smaller patches. Leaf type and patch size did not affect macroinvertebrate density and richness, but the highest taxon richness was found in winter and at the unpolluted site. There were more shredders and predators than in the natural riverbed. Our study supports two recent ideas regarding leaf processing in streams: that patch size influences the leaf breakdown rate and that the breakdown rate can be used to evaluate water quality and environmental health.  相似文献   

20.
SUMMARY. Effects of forest clearcutting on rates of leaf breakdown were studied in Big Hurricane Branch, a second-order stream located at Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory in the southern Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina, USA. Breakdown rates of leaves of three tree species were measured in the stream before, during and after the catchment was clearcut. Changes in the stream attributable to logging and associated activities—principally road building—were increased stream flow, increased sediment transport, elevated water temperatures, increased nitrate concentrations and decreased allochthonous organic inputs. Breakdown rates of all three leaf species were slowed during clearcutting and accelerated later. Following logging the breakdown rate of dogwood leaves was equal to the pre-treatment rate, and white oak and rhododendron leaves broke down faster than prior to treatment. We attribute the slow breakdown during treatment to burial of the leaf packs in sediment. Subsequent acceleration may have been due to a lack of alternative food sources for invertebrate detritivores.  相似文献   

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