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

Date

2008

Authors

Deegan, B.
Ganf, G.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Austral Ecology, 2008; 33(5):672-683

Statement of Responsibility

Brian M. Deegan and George G. Ganf

Conference Name

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.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Copyright © 2008 The Authors Journal compilation © 2008 Ecological Society of Australia

Access Status

Rights

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record