Emergent Insect Production in Post-Harvest Flooded Agricultural Fields Used by Waterbirds

California's Tulare Lake Basin (TLB) is one of the most important waterbird areas in North America even though most wetlands there have been converted to cropland. To guide management programs promoting waterbird beneficial agriculture, which includes flooding fields between growing periods, we...

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Veröffentlicht in:Wetlands (Wilmington, N.C.) N.C.), 2009-09, Vol.29 (3), p.875-883
Hauptverfasser: Moss, Richard C., Blumenshine, Steven C., Yee, Julie, Fleskes, Joseph P.
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creator Moss, Richard C.
Blumenshine, Steven C.
Yee, Julie
Fleskes, Joseph P.
description California's Tulare Lake Basin (TLB) is one of the most important waterbird areas in North America even though most wetlands there have been converted to cropland. To guide management programs promoting waterbird beneficial agriculture, which includes flooding fields between growing periods, we measured emergence rates of insects, an important waterbird food, in three crop types (tomato, wheat, alfalfa) in the TLB relative to water depth and days flooded during August–October, 2003 and 2004. We used corrected Akaike's Information Criterion values to compare a set of models that accounted for our repeated measured data. The best model included crop type and crop type interacting with days flooded and depth flooded. Emergence rates (mg m−2 day−1) were greater in tomato than wheat or alfalfa fields, increased with days flooded in alfalfa and tomato but not wheat fields, and increased with water depth in alfalfa and wheat but not tomato fields. To investigate the relationship between the range of diel water temperatures and insect emergence rates, we reared Chironomus dilutus larvae in environmental chambers under high (15–32°C) and low fluctuation (20–26°C) temperature regimes that were associated with shallow and deep (respectively) sampling sites in our fields. Larval survival (4×) and biomass (2×) were greater in the low thermal fluctuation treatment suggesting that deeply flooded areas would support greater insect production.
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source BioOne Complete; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals; ProQuest Central UK/Ireland; ProQuest Central
subjects Agricultural land
Alfalfa
Aquatic birds
basins
Biomedical and Life Sciences
California
Cereal crops
Chironomus
Chironomus dilutus
Coastal Sciences
Crops
depth
eclosion
Ecology
emergence traps
Environmental chambers
Environmental Management
fields
Flooded areas
flooded conditions
flooding depth
flooding duration
Floods
Freshwater
Freshwater & Marine Ecology
Heat treatment
Hydrogeology
Insects
Lake basins
Landscape Ecology
Larvae
Life Sciences
Lycopersicon esculentum
Medicago sativa
mortality
Solanum lycopersicum var. lycopersicum
surface water
Test chambers
Tomatoes
Triticum aestivum
Tulare Lake Basin
Tulare Lake, California
Water depth
Water temperature
waterbird food
Waterfowl
wetlands
Wheat
title Emergent Insect Production in Post-Harvest Flooded Agricultural Fields Used by Waterbirds
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