The ecology of acidification and recovery: changes in herbivore-algal food web linkages across a stream pH gradient.

Autor: Ledger ME; Queen Mary, University of London, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS, UK. m.e.ledger@bham.ac.uk, Hildrew AG
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Environmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987) [Environ Pollut] 2005 Sep; Vol. 137 (1), pp. 103-18.
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2004.12.024
Abstrakt: We examined the effects of acidification on herbivore-algal food web linkages in headwater streams. We determined the structure and abundance of consumer and benthic algal assemblages, and gauged herbivory, in 10 streams along a pH gradient (mean annual pH 4.6-6.4). Biofilm taxonomic composition changed with pH but total abundance did not vary systematically across the gradient. Mayflies and chironomids dominated under circumneutral conditions but declined with increasing acidity and their consumption of algae was strongly reduced. Contrary to expectations, several putative shredder species consumed algae, maintaining the herbivore-algal linkage where specialist grazers could not persist. These shifts in functioning could render the communities of acidified streams resistant to reinvasion when acidity ameliorates and water chemistry is restored to a pre-acidification condition. This hypothesis is discussed in the light of recent trends in the chemistry and biology of the UK Acid Waters Monitoring Network sites.
Databáze: MEDLINE