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Grazing and the distribution of sediment particle sizes in artificial stream systems
Authors:Thomas J Gardner
Institution:(1) The University of Oklahoma Biological Station, 73439 Kingston, OK, USA;(2) Present address: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 6, 75202-2733 Dallas, TX, USA
Abstract:Recent research has shown that grazing by the algivorous minnows of the genus Campostoma can have a significant effect on both structural and functional parameters in stream ecosystems, influencing algal height and type, primary productivity, carbon dynamics, bacterial biomass and the size fractionation of benthic organic matter. This study was undertaken to evaluate the effect of minnow grazing on benthic particulate organic matter (BPOM) under the controlled conditions available in experimental streams. For this study, four grazed and four ungrazed artificial streams were sampled for BPOM on two dates. The samples were partitioned into large, medium, fine and ultrafine fractions via wet filtration. Fish grazed systems had significantly larger percentages of the fine fraction and significantly smaller percentages of the ultrafine fraction. The ability of grazers to alter particle size distribution is important to overall stream organic matter dynamics because recent studies have shown the importance of particle size in determining bacterial numbers and activity, which in turn influence fundamental stream process like respiration and organic carbon dynamics.
Keywords:grazing  Campostoma  sediment particle size fractions  experimental streams  bacteria
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