Assessing the influence of wildfire on leaf decomposition and macroinvertebrate communities in boreal streams using mixed‐species leaf packs
Autor: | David P. Kreutzweiser, Jordan L. Musetta-Lambert, Paul K. Sibley |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
geography geography.geographical_feature_category Ecology 010604 marine biology & hydrobiology Aquatic Science Plant litter 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences Decomposer Boreal Abundance (ecology) Litter Riparian forest Environmental science Species richness Riparian zone |
Zdroj: | Freshwater Biology. 65:1047-1062 |
ISSN: | 1365-2427 0046-5070 |
DOI: | 10.1111/fwb.13488 |
Popis: | We investigated how compositional differences in riparian leaf litter derived from burned and undisturbed forests influenced leaf breakdown and macroinvertebrate communities using experimental mixed‐species leaf packs in boreal headwater streams. Leaf pack mixtures simulating leaf litter from dominant riparian woody‐stem species in burned and undisturbed riparian zones were incubated in two references and two fire‐disturbed streams for 5 weeks prior to measuring temperature‐corrected breakdown rates and macroinvertebrate community composition, richness, and functional metrics associated with decomposers such as shredder abundance and % shredders. Leaf litter breakdown rates were higher and had greater variability in streams bordered by reference riparian forests than in streams where riparian forests had been burned during a wildfire. Streams bordered by fire disturbance showed significant effects of litter mixture on decomposition rates, observed as significantly higher decomposition rates of a fire‐simulated leaf mixture compared to all other mixtures. Variation among sites was higher than variation among litter mixtures, especially for macroinvertebrate community composition. In general, fire‐simulated leaf mixtures had greater shredder abundances and proportions, but lower overall macroinvertebrate abundance; however, the shredder abundance trend was not consistent across all leaf mixtures at each stream. These results show that disturbance‐driven riparian forest condition and resulting composition of leaf subsidies to streams can influence aquatic invertebrate community composition and their function as decomposers. Therefore, if one of the primary goals of modern forest management is to emulate natural disturbance patterns, boreal forest managers should adapt silvicultural practices to promote leaf litter input that would arise post‐fire, thereby supporting stream invertebrate communities and their function. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |