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Dietary Dependence of Predatory Arthropods on Volant Aquatic Insects in Tropical Stream Riparia
Author(s) -
Yuen Elaine Y. L.,
Dudgeon David
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
biotropica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.813
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1744-7429
pISSN - 0006-3606
DOI - 10.1111/btp.12271
Subject(s) - cursorial , predation , aquatic insect , ecology , biology , riparian zone , food web , spider , larva , habitat
The dietary dependence on volant aquatic insects of eight species of predatory arthropods from three different orders was determined by stable isotope analyses in combination with three‐source, two‐isotope (C and N) Bayesian mixing models. The predators were collected from riparian zones along three streams in tropical Hong Kong during both the wet and dry seasons. Dietary importance of aquatic insects varied according to predator hunting modes, and showed a consistent pattern across all sites during the wet season. The web‐building tetragnathid spider ( O rsinome diporusa ) had the greatest reliance (~40–55%) on this water‐to‐land subsidy, followed by two species of damselflies (40–50%), three cursorial spiders (Lycosidae, Pisauridae, and Sparassidae: 32–51%) and two neustic gerrids (17–36%). Such reliance also varied according to the microhabitat preferences of different cursorial spiders. Four species of predators (gerrids and cursorial spiders) that were active year‐round showed generally consistent reliance on aquatic insects between seasons, which probably reflected the observed lack of seasonal variability in the relative proportions of aquatic and terrestrial prey. There was a marked overlap in isotopic signatures of aquatic and terrestrial prey at all sites which, combined with the absence of data on the extent to which isotopic fractionations may vary among individual species of prey and predators, contributes some uncertainty to the estimates of dietary compositions derived by mixing models. The findings of the present study are thus likely to be indicative rather than definitive.

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