Tuesday, May 19, 2009
296

Consumption of leaf litter by stream invertebrates: Evaluating leaf size

Carl R. Ruetz III, Grand Valley State University Annis Water Resource Institute, 740 West Shorline Drive, Muskegon, MI 49441 and Matthew J. Breen, Northeastern Region, Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, 152 East 100 North, Vernal, UT 84078.

Consumption of terrestrial leaf litter by stream invertebrates is an important component of leaf breakdown.  The size of leaves comprising a leaf pack can affect breakdown rates, but underlying mechanisms are unclear.  We hypothesize that large leaves (based on width) are preferred by shredders because of high nitrogen content (low C:N).  To test this hypothesis, we investigated consumption rates of autumnal senescent red maple (Acer rubrum) leaves by Gammarus pseudolimnaeus and Pycnopsyche lepida.  Using a factorial design, leaf discs (diameter= 2.5 cm) from small (<7 cm), medium (7-9.5 cm), or large (>9.5 cm) leaves were placed in in-stream containers with shredders (2 G. pseudolimnaeus or 1 P. lepida) for 48-hr feeding trials.  We also examined quality (C:N) of leaves from 5 randomly selected trees that were incubated in the stream for 14 days.  On a biomass basis, G. pseudolimnaeus consumed 4× more leaf material than P. lepida (P<0.001), but consumption rates did not differ with leaf size (P=0.202) or the size-shredder interaction (P=0.831).  However, large leaves had lower C:N than medium or small leaves (P=0.0178), and C:N differed among trees (P=0.008).  Although leaf quality was a function of size, shredders did not show a feeding preference based on leaf size.


Web Page: leaf breakdown, Michigan stream, shredder