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Population dynamics and feeding of mayfly larvae in some acid and alkaline New Zealand streams
Author(s) -
COLLIER K. J.,
WINTERBOURN M. J.
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
freshwater biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.297
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1365-2427
pISSN - 0046-5070
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2427.1990.tb00263.x
Subject(s) - mayfly , streams , population , biology , biomass (ecology) , grazing , ecology , larva , zoology , omnivore , hydrobiology , computer network , demography , aquatic environment , sociology , computer science , predation
SUMMARY. 1. Population dynamics (density, biomass, annual production), gut contents and feeding rates of mayflies ( Deleatidium spp.; Leptophlebiidae) were compared in two naturally acid (mean pH≃4.8). brownwater streams and two alkaline (mean pH 7.5), clearwater streams in South Westland, New Zealand. 2. Mean densities of larvae (range 234–2318 m −2 ) were higher in alkaline streams on most of the six bimonthly sampling dates. Mean biomass (range 0.020–0.376 g larval dry weight (LDW) m −2 ) was always highest at the stable, spring‐fed, alkaline site and was lower at the acid sites and another alkaline site where the population was always dominated by small larvae. 3. Annual production was high at the more stable, alkaline site (10.35 gLDW m −2 ) but much lower at the other sites (2.49–3.77 g m −2 ). 4. Gut contents of larvae were dominated by fine (45–75 μm widest diameter) paniculate matter (69–99%), diatoms (up to 21%) and. at one site, filamentous algae (8–13%). 5. Grazing rates of mayflies on epilithon were significantly higher on stones taken from acid than alkaline streams and material grazed from the former contained a higher proportion of inorganic material (87–93% and 61–83% inorganics, respectively). 6. Higher grazing rates may reflect lower quality of epilithic food in acid, brownwater streams, a factor that could contribute to the lower productivity of Deleatidium populations at these sites.

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