4.5 Article

The Effects of Plant Invasion and Ecosystem Restoration on Energy Flow through Salt Marsh Food Webs

期刊

ESTUARIES AND COASTS
卷 37, 期 2, 页码 339-353

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-013-9673-5

关键词

Diet quality; Fundulus heteroclitus; Phenolics; Phragmites australis; Sensitivity analysis; SIAR

资金

  1. EPA STAR Graduate Fellowship [FP-91710001-0]
  2. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NERR Graduate Fellowship [NA09NOS4200041]
  3. National Science Foundation (NSF) IGERT [0504103]
  4. Philanthropic Educational Organization [Lellis-Dib3158688]
  5. Northeast Aquatic Plant Management Society
  6. Rhode Island Natural History Survey
  7. Nature Conservancy of Rhode Island [Lellis-Dibble 05-30-09]
  8. URI Coastal Fellows Program
  9. US NSF DEB Award [1049914]
  10. URI Agricultural Experiment Station [RI00H-332, 311000-6044]
  11. U.S. Fulbright Commission
  12. Czech Fulbright Commission
  13. Direct For Biological Sciences
  14. Division Of Environmental Biology [1050084, 1049914] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  15. Direct For Education and Human Resources
  16. Division Of Graduate Education [0504103] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

We measured the effects of a plant invasion (Phragmites australis) on resident fish (Fundulus heteroclitus) in New England salt marshes by assessing diet quality at the food web base and by quantifying the importance of primary producers to secondary production using a recently developed Bayesian mixing model (Stable Isotope Analysis in R, SIAR). Spartina alterniflora, the dominant native plant, exhibited significantly greater leaf toughness and higher C/N ratios relative to P. australis. Benthic microalgae and phytoplankton (as suspended particulate matter) exhibited the lowest C/N indicating higher diet quality. We conducted a sensitivity analysis in SIAR by modeling F. heteroclitus at three separate trophic levels (1.5, 2.0, and 2.5) using species-specific discrimination factors to determine basal resource contributions. Overall, the best-fitting models include those that assume F. heteroclitus resides approximately 2.0 trophic levels above primary producers. Using discrimination factors from a range of data sources reported in the literature, our analyses revealed that consumers rely less on benthic microalgae and phytoplankton in restricted marshes (7-23 % and 11-44 %, respectively) relative to reference marshes (5-34 % and 23-48 %, respectively), resulting in a shift in diet toward invasive plant consumption (0-27 %). This is likely due to increased P. australis cover and marsh surface shading leading to decreased microalgal biomass, combined with reduced flooding of the marsh surface that favors terrestrial invertebrate assemblages. Restoration decreased the quantity of P. australis in the food web (0-15 %) and increased the importance of microalgae (1-30 %), phytoplankton (19-48 %), and native plants (23-63 %), indicating a shift in ecological recovery toward reference conditions.

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