Effects of density and predation risk on leaf litter processing byPhylloicussp.
作者:
Renan de Souza Rezende,
Gustavo Figueiredo Marques Leite,
Anderson Kennedy Soares De‐Lima,
Luis Antonio Braga Da Silva Filho,
Camila Vilarinho Costa Chaves,
Ana Cecilia Holler Prette,
June Spriger Freitas,
José Francisco Gonçalves Júnior,
期刊:
Austral Ecology
(WILEY Available online 2015)
卷期:
Volume 40,
issue 6
页码: 693-700
ISSN:1442-9985
年代: 2015
DOI:10.1111/aec.12236
关键词: decomposition;feeding activity;leaf breakdown;predator–prey;top‐down control
数据来源: WILEY
摘要:
AbstractThe allochthonous detritus that accumulates in the substrate of streams is used by aquatic invertebrate shredders for shelter and food. Shredders are considered rare in tropical systems, and little information is available about the role of density effects and predation risk (associated with the perception of predators by prey) in relationship to the resources used by these organisms. The aim of this study was to examine experimentally the effects of increased predation risk and of the density ofPhylloicussp. (i.e. of two types of biological relationships) on the processing of the leaf litter ofNectandra megapotamica(Spreng.)Mez.Phylloicussp. can use leaf litter for case building and as a food resource. The density effect was measured using four treatments that differed only in the number of individuals (one, two, three or four). A second experiment with five treatments was performed to test the risk of non‐lethal predation on detritus consumption (shelter and food) byPhylloicussp. (T1:Caddisfly;T2:Mayfly;T3:Astyanax sp./fish;T4:Damselflies;T5:Stonefly). A singlePhylloicusand one other organism (a potential predator blocked with 0.5 mm fine mesh) were placed in each tank (0.002 m3volume). We observed a negative effect of density on per capita litter consumption (experiment 1). The low density ofPhylloicusmay be a natural factor that decreases intraspecific competition. In the presence of fish,Phylloicusshowed the lowest amount of litter processing observed in the experiment, indicating top‐down control (experiment 2). In treatments that involved the presence of invertebrates (non‐predatory and predatory),Phylloicusshowed the highest amount and an intermediate amount of leaf litter processing, respectively (experiment 2). This observation also suggests that the predation effect is more probable for specific predator–prey pairs. Population density and predation risk inPhylloicusmay be important factors controlling leaf litter
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