Growth, survival, and metal content of marsh invertebrates fed diets of detritus from Spartina alterniflora Loisel. and Phragmites australis Cav. Trin. ex Steud. from metal-contaminated and clean sites

被引:24
作者
Weis J.S. [1 ]
Windham L. [1 ]
Santiago-Bass C. [2 ]
Weis P. [3 ]
机构
[1] Department of Biological Sciences, Rutgers University, Newark
[2] Langan Engineering and Environmental Services, Elmwood Park
[3] Department of Anatomy, Cell Biology and Injury Science, NJ Medical School, Newark
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Crab; Detritus; Diet; Growth; Metal; Phragmites; Regeneration; Shrimp; Spartina; Survival;
D O I
10.1023/A:1014311521708
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Marsh vegetation plays an important role in trophic ecology of estuaries. Once broken down to detritus, it is an important food source for many organisms. In Atlantic Coast marshes, the reed Phragmites australis has been invading many areas once dominated by smooth cordgrass, Spartina alterniflora. In this study we evaluated the growth of and trophic transfer of metals to estuarine invertebrates when fed diets of detritus from these different plant species. Decaying leaves from populations of Phragmites, natural Spartina, and restored Spartina from both the Hackensack Meadowlands, New Jersey, and the more pristine Accabonac Harbor of East Hampton, New York, were collected from the marsh surface in the spring. Decaying leaves were pureed and fed to the fiddler crabs Uca pugnax and U. pugilator, and to the grass shrimp Palaemonetes pugio. In fiddler crabs we monitored limb regeneration, molting and weight. U. pugilator regenerated limbs and molted equally well on all six diets. Most of the U. pugnax arrested growth midway through regeneration on all 6 diets. A repeat experiment with smaller crabs, which did complete the process, found no consistent differences among the six diets and control food, although control food and Phragmites detritus had higher N concentrations than the Spartina detritus. Grass shrimp fed all six diets did not survive beyond 3 weeks. In another experiment using HM sediments from each vegetation type (containing detritus, meiofauna, and microflora), survival was equally high among treatments and the shrimp fed sediments from the restored Spartina site or control food grew better than those fed sediments from the Phragmites or natural Spartina sites. Although metal concentrations in detritus varied between sites and plant species, the crabs of each group did not differ in metal concentrations after the feeding experiment. Our data do not support the general assumption that Phragmites leaf detritus is of poorer nutritional quality than Spartina alterniflora leaf detritus to estuarine consumers.
引用
收藏
页码:71 / 84
页数:13
相关论文
共 36 条
[11]  
Giblin A.E., Bourg A., Valiela I., Teal J.M., Uptake and losses of heavy metals in sewage sludge by a New England salt marsh, Amer. J. Bot., 67, pp. 1059-1068, (1980)
[12]  
Hatch W.R., Ou W.L., Determination of sub-microgram quantities of mercury by atomic absorption spectrophotometry, Anal. Chem., 40, pp. 2085-2087, (1968)
[13]  
Khan A.T., Weis J.S., Bioaccumulation of heavy metals in two populations of mummichog (Fundulus heteroclitus), Bull. Env. Cont. Tox., 51, pp. 1-5, (1993)
[14]  
Kneib R.T., Patterns in the utilization of the intertidal salt marsh by larvae and juveniles of Fundulus heteroclitus (L.) and Fundulus luciae (Baird), J. Exp. Marine Biol. Ecol., 83, pp. 41-51, (1984)
[15]  
Levin L.A., Talley D., Thayer G., Succession of macrobenthos in a created salt marsh, Marine Ecol. Prog. Ser., 141, pp. 67-82, (1996)
[16]  
Marinucci A.C., Trophic importance of Spartina alterniflora production and decomposition to the marsh-estuarine ecosystem, Biol. Cons., 22, pp. 35-58, (1982)
[17]  
Minello T.J., Webb J., Use of natural and created Spartina alterniflora salt marshes by fishery species and other aquatic fauna in Galveston Bay, Texas, USA, Marine Ecol. Prog. Ser., 151, pp. 65-179, (1997)
[18]  
Montague C.L., A natural history of temperate Western Atlantic fiddler crabs (genus Uca) with reference to their impact on the salt marsh, Cont. Marine Sci., 23, pp. 25-55, (1980)
[19]  
Newell R.I.E., Kreeger D.A., Trophic links in salt marshes: Relative roles of angiosperms and microphytobenthos as carbon sources for invertebrate consumers, Conference on Concepts and Controversies in Tidal Marsh Ecology, (1998)
[20]  
Nomann B.E., Pennings S.C., Fiddler crab-vegetation interactions in hypersaline habitats, J. Exp. Marine Biol. Ecol., 225, pp. 53-68, (1998)