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Modification of littoral algal assemblages by gardening caddisfly larvae

Authors :
Ings, Nicola L.
Grey, Jonathan
King, Lydia
McGowan, Suzanne
Hildrew, Alan G.
Ings, Nicola L.
Grey, Jonathan
King, Lydia
McGowan, Suzanne
Hildrew, Alan G.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Sedentary herbivores may improve the food resources available to them by ‘gardening’, and most obviously by fertilising primary producers with excreted nutrients such as nitrogen. In five English lakes, spanning a gradient of nutrient availability, we predicted that fertilisation of the larval retreat by the littoral, gallery-building caddisfly Tinodes waeneri would result in: (a) a distinct algal assemblage from that in the background epilithon, and that (b) the difference would be greatest in the least productive lakes (where the importance of the nutrient subsidy from larvae should be greatest). Classes of algae present in samples of galleries and epilithon were investigated using chlorophyll and carotenoid pigment analysis and diatoms were identified. Galleries were characterised by a greater content of pigments indicative of diatoms, including fucoxanthin, than the background epilithon (which contained a higher proportion of chlorophyte algae). Redundancy analysis (RDA) of diatom counts indicated a clear separation between gallery and epilithic assemblages in all lakes, supporting hypothesis (a). Furthermore, in agreement with hypothesis (b), the assemblage of diatoms on galleries was most similar to that of the epilithon in the more productive lakes, with the greatest divergence in Windermere and Coniston, mainly due to a much greater relative proportion of Gomphonema in the epilithon than in the galleries, suggesting that fertilisation had a greater impact where background nutrient concentrations were low. Lakes in the RDA triplot were arranged in order of productivity along axis 1, with gallery assemblages in each case located towards the more productive end relative to the epilithon. This sedentary, retreat-building grazer, probably in common with many other taxa with such traits in aquatic ecosystems, improves its own food resources by gardening. Larvae can modify algal assemblages in their feeding patches by weeding and fertilisation. They create new surf

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
Ings, Nicola L. and Grey, Jonathan and King, Lydia and McGowan, Suzanne and Hildrew, Alan G. (2017) Modification of littoral algal assemblages by gardening caddisfly larvae. Freshwater Biology, 62 (3). pp. 507-518. ISSN 0046-5070
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1201475248
Document Type :
Electronic Resource