4.7 Article

Flux of aquatic insect productivity to land: comparison of lentic and lotic ecosystems

期刊

ECOLOGY
卷 90, 期 10, 页码 2689-2699

出版社

ECOLOGICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1890/08-1546.1

关键词

allochthonous resources; emerging aquatic insects; food webs; insect dispersal; lake-land linkages; landscape ecology; spatial subsidies

类别

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB-0717148]
  2. University of Wisconsin College of Agriculture (International Programs) [DEB-0449076]
  3. Division Of Environmental Biology
  4. Direct For Biological Sciences [0822700] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. Division Of Environmental Biology
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences [GRANTS:13842324] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Recently, food web studies have started exploring how resources from one habitat or ecosystem influence trophic interactions in a recipient ecosystem. Benthic production in lakes and streams can be exported to terrestrial habitats via emerging aquatic insects and can therefore link aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. In this study, we develop a general conceptual model that highlights zoobenthic production, insect emergence, and ecosystem geometry (driven principally by area-to-edge ratio) as important factors modulating the flux of aquatic production across the ecosystem boundary. Emerging insect flux, defined as total insect production emerging per meter of shoreline (g C.m(-1).yr(-1)) is then distributed inland using decay functions and is used to estimate insect deposition rate to terrestrial habitats (g C.m(-2).yr(-1)). Using empirical data from the literature, we simulate insect fluxes across the water-land ecosystem boundary to estimate the distribution of fluxes and insect deposition inland for lakes and streams. In general, zoobenthos in streams are more productive than in lakes (6.67 vs. 1.46 g C.m(-2).yr(-1)) but have lower insect emergence to aquatic production ratios (0.19 vs. 0.30). However, as stream width is on average smaller than lake radius, this results in flux (F) estimates 21/2 times greater for lakes than for streams. Ultimately, insect deposition onto land (within 100 m of shore) adjacent to average-sized lakes (10-ha lakes, 0.021 g C.m(-2).yr(-1)) is greater than for average-sized streams (4m width, 0.002 g C.m(-2).yr(-1)) used in our comparisons. For the average lake (both in size and productivity), insect deposition rate approaches estimates of terrestrial secondary production in low-productivity ecosystems (e. g., deserts and tundra, approximate to 0.07 g C.m(-2).yr(-1)). However, larger lakes (1300 ha) and streams (16 m) can have average insect deposition rates (approximate to 0.01-2.4 g C.m(-2).yr(-1)) comparable to estimates of secondary production of more productive ecosystems such as grasslands. Because of the potentially large inputs of emerging aquatic insects into terrestrial habitats, ecosystem processes and terrestrial consumers can be influenced by insect inputs. The relative contribution of lakes and streams to this flux will vary among landscapes depending on the number and size of these ecosystems types on the landscape.

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