The loss of aquatic and riparian plant communities: Implications for their consumers in a riverine food web

IF 1.6 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY Austral Ecology Pub Date : 2008-07-04 DOI:10.1111/j.1442-9993.2008.01834.x
BRIAN M. DEEGAN, GEORGE G. GANF
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

Abstract  Human induced alterations to rivers and steams have resulted in significant changes to the structure and diversity of riparian and aquatic plant communities. These changes will impact on the dynamics of riverine carbon cycles and food web structure and function. Here we investigate the principal sources of organic carbon supporting local shredder communities across a gradient in different levels of anthropogenic development along riverine reaches, in South Australia. In forested/wooded reaches with minimum to limited development, semi-emergent macrophytes were the principal sources of organic carbon supporting the local shredder communities. However, in developed reaches, course particulate organic matter and filamentous algae were the principal food sources. The C:N ratios of the food sources in developed reaches were higher than those of their consumers indicating a stoichiometric mismatch. This imbalanced consumer-resource nutrient ratio in those developed reaches is likely to impose constraints on the growth and reproduction of their aquatic shredder communities with probable knock-on effects to higher trophic levels.

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水生和河岸植物群落的丧失:对河流食物网消费者的影响
人类对河流和蒸汽的改变导致了河流和水生植物群落结构和多样性的显著变化。这些变化将影响河流碳循环的动态和食物网的结构和功能。在这里,我们调查了有机碳的主要来源,支持当地碎纸机社区在不同程度的人类发展的梯度,沿着河流到达,在南澳大利亚。在发展程度最低或有限的森林/树木覆盖地区,半新兴大型植物是支持当地碎纸机群落的主要有机碳来源。而在发育河段,河道颗粒有机质和丝状藻类是主要的食物来源。发达地区食物来源的碳氮比高于消费者,表明存在化学计量错配。在这些发达河段,这种不平衡的消费-资源营养比例很可能会限制其水生碎纸机群落的生长和繁殖,并可能对更高的营养水平产生连锁反应。
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来源期刊
Austral Ecology
Austral Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
117
审稿时长
12-24 weeks
期刊介绍: Austral Ecology is the premier journal for basic and applied ecology in the Southern Hemisphere. As the official Journal of The Ecological Society of Australia (ESA), Austral Ecology addresses the commonality between ecosystems in Australia and many parts of southern Africa, South America, New Zealand and Oceania. For example many species in the unique biotas of these regions share common Gondwana ancestors. ESA''s aim is to publish innovative research to encourage the sharing of information and experiences that enrich the understanding of the ecology of the Southern Hemisphere. Austral Ecology involves an editorial board with representatives from Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, Brazil and Argentina. These representatives provide expert opinions, access to qualified reviewers and act as a focus for attracting a wide range of contributions from countries across the region. Austral Ecology publishes original papers describing experimental, observational or theoretical studies on terrestrial, marine or freshwater systems, which are considered without taxonomic bias. Special thematic issues are published regularly, including symposia on the ecology of estuaries and soft sediment habitats, freshwater systems and coral reef fish.
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