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Importance of T errestrial A rthropods as S ubsidies in L owland N eotropical R ain F orest S tream E cosystems
Author(s) -
Small Gaston E.,
Torres Pedro J.,
Schweizer Lauren M.,
Duff John H.,
Pringle Catherine M.
Publication year - 2013
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/j.1744-7429.2012.00896.x
Subject(s) - streams , terrestrial ecosystem , ecosystem , nutrient , ecology , invertebrate , temperate climate , biology , terrestrial plant , environmental science , aquatic ecosystem , nutrient cycle , computer network , computer science
The importance of terrestrial arthropods has been documented in temperate stream ecosystems, but little is known about the magnitude of these inputs in tropical streams. Terrestrial arthropods falling from the canopy of tropical forests may be an important subsidy to tropical stream food webs and could also represent an important flux of nitrogen ( N ) and phosphorus ( P ) in nutrient‐poor headwater streams. We quantified input rates of terrestrial insects in eight streams draining lowland tropical wet forest in C osta R ica. In two focal headwater streams, we also measured capture efficiency by the fish assemblage and quantified terrestrially derived N ‐ and P ‐excretion relative to stream nutrient uptake rates. Average input rates of terrestrial insects ranged from 5 to 41 mg dry mass/m 2 /d, exceeding previous measurements of aquatic invertebrate secondary production in these study streams, and were relatively consistent year‐round, in contrast to values reported in temperate streams. Terrestrial insects accounted for half of the diet of the dominant fish species, P riapicthys annectens . Although terrestrially derived fish excretion was found to be a small flux relative to measured nutrient uptake rates in the focal streams, the efficient capture and processing of terrestrial arthropods by fish made these nutrients available to the local stream ecosystem. This aquatic‐terrestrial linkage is likely being decoupled by deforestation in many tropical regions, with largely unknown but potentially important ecological consequences.

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