4.1 Article

Hydrology and pool morphology shape the trophic base of macroinvertebrate assemblages in ephemeral stream pools

Journal

FRESHWATER SCIENCE
Volume 39, Issue 3, Pages 461-475

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/709647

Keywords

flow intermittency; food webs; groundwater connectivity; evaporative contraction; aquatic vegetation; stable isotope analysis

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council
  2. Rio Tinto [LP0776626]
  3. ARC [FT110100352]

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Intermittent and ephemeral streams in dryland regions often fragment into isolated pools as they dry. In general, pool fragmentation provides favorable conditions for aquatic algae and plant growth and should therefore result in foodweb reliance on aquatic algal resources over comparatively-recalcitrant terrestrial plant litter. However, differences in pool hydrology and morphology might substantially alter organic matter dynamics and, thus, alter the trophic base of aquatic consumers. We tested whether 1) taxa composition or 2) pool hydrology and morphology might affect the trophic base of macroinvertebrate assemblages in dryland stream pools. We used stable isotope analysis to assess the hydrological regime (delta O-18 and delta H-2) and trophic structure (delta C-13 and delta N-15) of fragmented pools within an ephemeral dryland stream. We compared differences in pool morphology, evaporation rates, and groundwater connectivity to dietary-mixing model results for macroinvertebrate assemblages over 2 seasons. Differences in macroinvertebrate assemblage composition were not consistently related to pool hydrology, morphology, or season. We found that filamentous algae and aquatic biofilms supported macroinvertebrate assemblages to a greater extent than did terrestrial plant litter. Biofilm assimilation was higher in highly-evaporated pools, and terrestrial plant litter assimilation decreased as pools became smaller and aquatic vegetation cover decreased. Overall trophic diversity decreased with increasing aquatic vegetation cover. This study suggests that hydrological and morphological gradients across pools drive differences in the trophic base of macroinvertebrate assemblages, potentially through variation in organic matter productivity and biomass. Consequently, natural variability in groundwater connectivity and pool morphology likely enhances trophic diversity across this ephemeral riverscape.

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