
How Do You Rate This Publication?
![]()
| Title: | Spatial and temporal variation in invertebrate consumer diets in forested and herbaceous wetlands |
|---|---|
| Author(s): | Taylor, Alani N.; Batzer, Darold P. |
| Date: | 2010 |
| Source: | Hydrobiologia 651:145-159 |
| Station ID: | --651 |
| Description: | Macroinvertebrates have important functional roles in wetland ecosystems, but these roles are not always well understood. This study assessed which foods invertebrate consumers assimilate within a set of wetland habitats. During 2006 and 2007, non-Tanypodinae chironomid larvae and select crustaceans (Crangonyx amphipods, Caecidotea isopods, Simocephalus cladocerans) were sampled, along with their potential food sources, from forested and herbaceous areas in wetland habitats (depression, floodplain, swamp complex) across the southeastern U.S.A. Invertebrate and food source samples were processed for carbon and nitrogen isotope signatures. These data were analyzed with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s IsoSource mixing model, to estimate the potential relative contributions of different food items and to highlight both important and unlikely food sources. In the forested habitats, litter from trees (leaves, wood, fruit), epiphyton, detrital FPOM (fine particulate organic matter), sediment, and macrophyte litter were found to be major foods for midges and crustaceans, although considerable spatial and temporal variation existed in consumption. In the herbaceous habitats, algae (epiphyton, periphyton, metaphyton, phytoplankton), sediment, and macrophyte litter were important food resources. Comparisons between forested and herbaceous wetlands suggested that algal resources were widely consumed by midges and crustaceans, and that detrital sources were also important in forested wetlands. |
View and Print this Publication (694.38 KB) ![]() |
Publication Notes: |
We recommend that you also print this page and attach it to the printout of the article, to retain the full citation information.
This article was written and prepared by U.S. Government employees on official time, and is therefore in the public domain. Our on-line publications are scanned and captured using Adobe Acrobat. During the capture process some typographical errors may occur. Please contact the SRS Webmaster, srswebmaster@fs.fed.us if you notice any errors which make this publication unuseable. You may send email to pubrequest@fs.fed.us to request a hard copy of this publication. (Please specify exactly which publication you are requesting and your mailing address.) |
| Get the latest version of the Adobe Acrobat reader or Acrobat Reader for Windows with Search and Accessibility |