Journal
ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages 544-550Publisher
SPRINGER TOKYO
DOI: 10.1007/s11284-006-0149-y
Keywords
benthic organic matter; food resource; litter input; nitrogen; stream macroinvertebrates
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We conducted a decomposition experiment using green and senescent maple and alder leaves in a coastal headwater stream in Hokkaido, northern Japan, during June and July 2000. We estimated whether shredder colonization on the leaves and leaf breakdown differed between green and senescent leaves during the experimental period. Late-instar Lepidostoma complicatum (Trichoptera) and Sternomoera rhyaca (Amphipoda) were the predominant shredder taxa among the macroinvertebrates that colonized litterbags. There was no significant difference in shredder colonization between green and senescent leaves although we found a significant difference between maple and alder leaves. The colonization patterns of large individuals of L. complicatum and S. rhyaca differed from those of small individuals. All decomposition coefficients of green and senescent leaves were high. During the experiment, decomposition was significantly faster in maple than in alder leaves, although no significant difference was found between green and senescent leaves. However, the fragmented nitrogen portion was higher in green leaves than in senescent leaves during the experiment. Higher nitrogen release (2-2.5 times more) as particulate organic matter in green than in senescent leaves indicates that green leaves may be a potentially valuable food resource for other macroinvertebrate collector-gatherer species.
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