Production and population dynamics of the prosobranch snail Sulcospira hainanensis (Pachychilidae), a major secondary consumer in Hong Kong streams |
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Authors: | Alex C. Y. Yeung David Dudgeon |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Biological Sciences, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
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Abstract: | Pachychilid snails are common and widespread in tropical Asian streams, and given their abundance, these heavy-shelled prosobranchs may serve as a ‘trophic dead-end’ preventing energy transfer to higher trophic levels. Sulcospira hainanensis (Bröt, 1872) is an abundant secondary consumer in Hong Kong streams, and tends to have higher standing biomass in less shaded sites. We predicted that S. hainanensis would be more productive in unshaded streams, where snails have a higher assimilation of more nutritious algal carbon. The production and population dynamics of S. hainanensis were studied along a gradient of shading in four Hong Kong streams. The increment-summation method was considered to most realistically represent snail production, which ranged from 1,612.8 to 6,123.9 mg ash-free dry mass m?2 year?1; these estimates were among the upper range of values reported for stream prosobranchs. Production, turnover, and growth were higher in unshaded streams, where the combined effects of higher light input and nutrient concentrations likely enhanced the supply of algal food. Despite high standing biomass (26% of total benthic fauna), S. hainanensis had a relatively low (~16%) contribution to total production in one site, suggesting that it is not a major trophic dead-end in the food webs of tropical Hong Kong streams. |
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