Effects of organic matter and season on leaf litter colonisation and breakdown in cave streams
Summary 1. Low organic matter availability is thought to be a primary factor influencing evolutionary and ecological processes in cave ecosystems. We examined links among organic matter abundance, macroinvertebrate community structure and breakdown rates of red maple (Acer rubrum) and corn litter (Z...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Freshwater biology 2012-04, Vol.57 (4), p.773-786 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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1. Low organic matter availability is thought to be a primary factor influencing evolutionary and ecological processes in cave ecosystems. We examined links among organic matter abundance, macroinvertebrate community structure and breakdown rates of red maple (Acer rubrum) and corn litter (Zea mays) in coarse‐ (10 × 8 mm) and fine‐mesh (500‐μm) litter bags over two seasonal periods in four cave streams in the south‐eastern U.S.A.
2. Organic matter abundance differed among cave streams, averaging from near zero to 850 g ash‐free dry mass m−2. Each cave system harboured a different macroinvertebrate community. However, trophic structure was similar among caves, with low shredder biomass (2–17% of total biomass).
3. Corn litter breakdown rates (mean k = 0.005 day−1) were faster than red maple (mean k = 0.003 day−1). Breakdown rates in coarse‐mesh bags (k = 0.001–0.012 day−1) were up to three times faster than in fine‐mesh bags (k = 0.001–0.004 day−1). Neither invertebrate biomass in litter bags nor breakdown rates were correlated with the ambient abundance of organic matter. Litter breakdown rates showed no significant temporal variation. Epigean (surface‐adapted) invertebrates dominated biomass in litter bags, suggesting that their effects on cave ecosystem processes may be greater than hypogean (cave‐adapted) taxa, the traditional focus of cave studies.
4. The functional diversity of our cave communities and litter breakdown rates are comparable to those found in previous litter breakdown studies in cave streams, suggesting that the factors that control organic matter processing (e.g. trophic structure of communities) may be broadly similar across geographically diverse areas. |
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ISSN: | 0046-5070 1365-2427 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2012.02742.x |