EARLY HEARING DETECTION AND INTERVENTION VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
MARCH 2-5, 2021
(Virtually the same conference, without elevators, airplane tickets, or hotel room keys)
6/05/2017 | 2:00 PM - 2:15 PM | MERGING ECOSYSTEM AND FOOD-WEB UNDERSTANDING OF THE CONSEQUENCES OF TERRESTRIAL SUBSIDIES IN A FORESTED STREAM | 301A
MERGING ECOSYSTEM AND FOOD-WEB UNDERSTANDING OF THE CONSEQUENCES OF TERRESTRIAL SUBSIDIES IN A FORESTED STREAM
We combined estimates of secondary production of fishes, their diets, and bioenergetic efficiencies to estimate the contribution of aquatic vs. terrestrial prey to the trophic basis of production of 5 fishes in a Hokkaido stream. We found that 27-62% of total annual fish production was based on terrestrial prey, with terrestrial contributions to 3 dominant salmonid species all >56%. Organic matter fluxes to fish production totaled 8.79 g AFDM m-2 y-1 from terrestrial prey and 7.13 g AFDM m-2 y-1 from aquatic prey. Fish consumed 66% of the flux of terrestrial prey to fuel their production, and organic matter flows to fishes peaked in late summer when terrestrial prey input peaked, and when previous experiments have demonstrated positive indirect effects of terrestrial prey subsidies on aquatic invertebrates. Yet, at annual time scales fish consumed >80% of total aquatic invertebrate production, suggesting a nonlinear and dynamic fish-invertebrate interaction, and neutral or negative indirect effects of terrestrial subsidies on aquatic invertebrates. Combining ecosystem and food web perspectives may change our understanding of the indirect effects of prey subsidies across time scales.
- C25 Food Webs
- C11 Community Ecology
- C28 Land-Water Interfaces
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Presenters/Authors
Amy Marcarelli
(), Michigan Technological University, ammarcar@mtu.edu;
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Colden Baxter
(), Idaho State University, baxtcold@isu.edu;
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Joseph Benjamin
(), USGS Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, Corvallis, OR, jbenjamin@usgs.gov;
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Yo Miyake
(), Ehime University, miyake@cee.ehime-u.ac.jp;
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Kurt D. Fausch
(), Colorado State University, Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, Fort Collins, CO 80523, Kurt.Fausch@colostate.edu;
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Masashi Murakami
(), Chiba University, muramasa@faculty.chiba-u.jp;
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Shigeru Nakano
(), Kyoto University, na;
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