4.5 Article

Resource-dependent foraging behaviour of grazers enhances effects of nutrient enrichment on algal biomass

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 201, Issue 2, Pages 479-488

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-022-05308-3

Keywords

Eutrophication; Foraging areas; Food quality; Movement ecology; Periphyton

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Both the quantity and quality of food resources can have a strong impact on the foraging behaviors of herbivores, which affects the control of primary producer biomass. The effects of nutrient enrichment on herbivore foraging and top-down control are not well understood. In this study, a two-factorial experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of nutrient enrichment on grazing activity and algal biomass removal.
Both the quantity and nutritional quality of food resources can strongly influence the foraging movements of herbivores, which in turn determine the strength of top-down control on primary producer biomass. Nutrient enrichment can alter the biomass and nutritional quality of primary producers, but the consequences for the foraging of herbivores and hence for top-down control are still poorly understood. In this study, we combined a two-factorial experiment (two nutrient levels x grazing by the freshwater gastropod Ancylus fluviatilis) with video analyses tracking grazers' movements to investigate nutrient enrichment effects on spatial ranges of grazing activity and algal biomass removal. Natural stream biofilms were grown in phosphorus-enriched (P+) and phosphorus-poor flumes (P-) for two weeks before A. fluviatilis were added to the flumes and allowed to graze on biofilm for an additional 2 weeks. Total periphyton biomass was enhanced by P+ and reduced by grazer presence. However, the total grazer effect depended on the nutrient level: at the end of the experiment, on average 95% of algal cover were removed by grazing in the P- flumes versus 26% in the P+ flumes. Fast movements of A. fluviatilis were detected significantly more often in the P- treatment, whereas grazers were detected resting more often in the P+ treatment. Our results demonstrate that nutrient enrichment can increase primary producer biomass both directly and indirectly by limiting the foraging ranges of herbivores. The resulting feedback loop between reduced grazing activity and increased plant biomass might in turn exacerbate eutrophication effects on habitat structure.

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