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On the ecology of the filter-feeding Neureclipsis bimaculata (Trichoptera, Polycentropodidae) in an acid and iron rich post-mining stream
Authors:Andreas Hünken  Michael Mutz
Institution:1. Department of Freshwater Conservation, Brandenburg University of Technology, Seestra?e 45, 15526, Bad Saarow, Germany
Abstract:Open-pit mining of lignite in East Germany has created landscapes with extreme environmental conditions. Post-mining aquatic habitats are characterized by low biodiversity and simple food webs due to the impact of acid mine drainage. In this study, the ecology of the filter-feeding caddisfly Neureclipsis bimaculata (L.) was examined, which is abundant in the acidic Floßgraben stream (pH 2.5–3.6) in Lower Lusatia, Germany. From benthic samples, we measured larval size and biomass and estimated population dynamics. The seston drift was sampled and retention efficiency of the larvae’s nets was assessed in a field tracer experiment to evaluate diet availability. Mean annual abundance was 1,380 ind m?2 with a biomass of 1,010 mg m?2. Annual secondary production of N. bimaculata was 8,450 mg m?2. The larval microdistribution reflected the preference for in-stream wood and a limitation by low flow velocity. Morphometric factors of the larvae in the acidic stream were in the range of morphometric factors found in circumneutral streams that covered a range of trophic levels. Although coverage by iron particles reduced flow, the nets account for 63% of the mean particle retention. It is suggested that the retention efficiency and the availability of drifting organisms allowed the larvae to feed on 8.4 mg m?2 per day, which revealed a ratio of biomass production to ingested food of 60%.
Keywords:Microdistribution  Larval development  Secondary production  Net capture efficiency  Organismic drift
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