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Effects of Macrobrachium hainanense predation on benthic community functioning in tropical Asian streams

Authors :
David Dudgeon
Sukhmani K. Mantel
Source :
Freshwater Biology. 49:1306-1319
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Wiley, 2004.

Abstract

Summary 1. Macrobrachium hainanense is a large predatory palaemonid shrimp, present at high densities in pools of low-order forested streams in Hong Kong. The present study investigated the impacts of M. hainanense on benthic community structure and functions in pools of two streams: Tai Po Kau Forest Stream and Tai Shing Stream. 2. Repeated whole-pool experiments involving shrimp density manipulations (removal, control and addition) were conducted in both streams between October 2000 and April 2002, and included a wet (May to September) and two dry (October to April) seasons. The three objectives of the study were to determine the effects of M. hainanense predation on benthic macroinvertebrate abundance and species richness, rates of leaf litter breakdown because of effects on detritivores, and periphyton standing stocks by way of an effect on herbivores. 3. Wet season results showed consistent reductions in benthos densities and species richness following heavy rainfall, irrespective of shrimp manipulation. These results suggested that spate-induced disturbances might override biotic effects and play a dominant role in structuring benthic communities in stream pools in Hong Kong. 4. No significant, reproducible effects on any of the response variables measured in either stream were found during the dry season. Litter breakdown was reduced in the absence of shrimps during one experiment only, suggesting it might be a type I error. These results signified no effect of shrimp removal on benthic communities, or on the functional processes of litter breakdown, or on periphyton accumulation. The large scale of the experimental units (8–40 m2), refuge availability, and the presence of benthic predatory fishes that cropped excess prey made available by removal of M. hainanense, may have contributed to the lack of any effect, despite the abundance of the predatory shrimps.

Details

ISSN :
13652427 and 00465070
Volume :
49
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Freshwater Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2cf3f24efac42e4d0eb6d858807acb89
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2427.2004.01268.x