High-quality algae attached to leaf litter boost invertebrate shredder growth
Author(s) -
Fen Guo,
Martin J. Kainz,
Dominic Valdez,
Fran Sheldon,
Stuart E. Bunn
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
freshwater science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.743
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 2161-9565
pISSN - 2161-9549
DOI - 10.1086/688667
Subject(s) - plant litter , biology , nutrient , algae , riparian zone , polyunsaturated fatty acid , litter , invertebrate , botany , ecology , agronomy , fatty acid , biochemistry , habitat
Algae are higher-quality food resources than allochthonous plant litter for stream invertebrates, in part, because of their higher content of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs). We tested the hypothesis that algal biofilms on the surfaces of leaf litter improve the nutritional quality of terrestrial inputs for invertebrate shredders. We used a laboratory feeding experiment with 2 light levels (open and shaded) and 2 nutrient regimes (ambient and enriched) to manipulate the algal biofilms that form on leaf surfaces (Lophostemon confertus). We assessed how these treatments affected the fatty acid (FA) composition of these biofilms and the somatic growth of a stream invertebrate shredder (Anisocentropus bicoloratus, Trichoptera) that feeds on the conditioned leaf litter. Shredders reached a significantly larger size when nutrients were added, and leaf mass loss was significantly greater in these treatments than in treatments without nutrients. Shredder growth was affected significantly by leaf PUFA content, and variations in shredder PUFA content were consistent with those in leaf PUFAs. Our results suggest that high-quality algae attached to leaf litter regulated the PUFA composition and improved the somatic growth of these shredders. Our data provide evidence that the availability of high-quality algae enhances dietary use of low-quality riparian leaf litter in stream food webs.Griffith Sciences, Griffith School of EnvironmentFull Tex
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