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The effects of disturbance on a herbivore-epilithon interaction in an upland stream
Authors:Benjamin Gawnel  P. S. Lake
Affiliation:(1) Dept. of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Monash University Clayton, 3168 Victoria, Australia;(2) Present address: Lower Basin Laboratory, Murray-Darling freshwater research centre, P.O. Box 3428, 3502 Mildura, Vic., Australia
Abstract:Two experiments were performed in an upland stream to determine the effects of the frequency of physical disturbance on the relationship between an abundant glossosomatid trichopteran (Agapetus monticolus; Banks) and the epilithon upon which it feeds. Artificial cobbles with an established epilithic community were tumbled either every 1, 2 or 4 weeks. The first experiment failed to detect any significant effects of rock tumbling on the abundance of A. monticolus or the epilithon: a result due to several spates. The first experiment did reveal that disturbances may disrupt the ability of A. monticolus to locate patches of abundant food. The second experiment found that although the abundance of A. monticolus was not affected by the disturbances, periphyton abundance was significantly reduced. Increasing the frequency of disturbance did not magnify this effect. Comparisons of these results with other studies of disturbance in streams indicate that the effects of disturbance on herbivory may be highly variable. A variety of factors, such as the relative resistances of the herbivores and the epilithon, need to be examined before the effects of disturbances on lotic herbivorous interactions can be completely understood.
Keywords:disturbance  trichoptera  grazing  herbivory  periphyton  macroinvertebrates
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