LIFE-HISTORIES AND PRODUCTION OF 2 TRICHOPTERAN SHREDDERS IN NEW-ZEALAND STREAMS WITH DIFFERENT RIPARIAN VEGETATION

被引:19
作者
LINKLATER, W
WINTERBOURN, MJ
机构
[1] Department of Zoology, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, Private Bag
[2] Water Quality Centre, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Ltd, Hamilton
关键词
TRICHOPTERA; SHREDDERS; STREAMS; LIFE HISTORIES; RIPARIAN VEGETATION; AQUATIC INSECTS; PRODUCTION; DETRITUS;
D O I
10.1080/00288330.1993.9516546
中图分类号
S9 [水产、渔业];
学科分类号
0908 ;
摘要
The life histories, microdistributions, and annual production of two trichopteran shredders Oeconesus maori (Oeconesidae) and Pycnocentria forcipata (Conoesucidae) were investigated in three small streams at Hinewai, Banks Peninsula, New Zealand. The riparian forest at the three sites was dominated by different tree species: mahoe, Melicytus ramiflorus; tree fuchsia, Fuchsia excorticata; and red beech, Nothofagus fusca-each of which had a distinctive litterfall pattern. Mean annual biomass of detritus (> 0.5 mm) on the stream beds was high (777-1982 g DW m-2) but temporal changes in biomass did not reflect litter fall patterns. O. maori was most abundant in pools. Small larvae appeared in late spring and most were in instars 4 and 5 in late autumn and winter. Mean larval densities in the three streams ranged from 90 to 1126 m-2. Annual production was greatest in the mahoe-dominated stream. Larvae of P. forcipata were most abundant on small falls and among root mats. Its life history was difficult to interpret. Mean larval densities ranged from 59 to 332 m-2 and annual production was again highest in the mahoe-dominated stream. We found little evidence for a shredder response in these three streams (i.e., the maximisation of shredder biomass at the time of maximum litter conditioning). A general lack of predictably pulsed litter inputs to streams, and a species-poor shredder fauna make it unlikely that such a response will be found in many New Zealand running waters.
引用
收藏
页码:61 / 70
页数:10
相关论文
共 31 条
[1]  
Anderson N.H., Sedell J.R., Detritus processing by macroinvertebrates in stream ecosystems, Annual Review of Entomology, 24, pp. 351-377, (1979)
[2]  
Benke A.C., Secondary production of aquatic insects, The Ecology of Aquatic Insects, pp. 289-322, (1984)
[3]  
Benke A.C., Wallace J.B., Trophic basis of production among net-spinning caddisflies in a Southern Appalachian stream, Ecology, 61, pp. 108-118, (1980)
[4]  
Chadderton W.L., The Ecology of Stewart Island Freshwater Communities, (1990)
[5]  
Collier K.J., Winterboum M.J., Faunal and chemical dynamics of some acid and alkaline New Zealand streams, Freshwater Biology, 18, pp. 227-240, (1987)
[6]  
Cowley D.R., Studies on the larvae of New Zealand Trichoptera, New Zealand Journal of Zoology, 5, pp. 639-750, (1978)
[7]  
Cowie B., An analysis of changes in the invertebrate community along a southern New Zealand montane stream, Hydrobiologia, 120, pp. 35-46, (1985)
[8]  
Cummins K.W., The trophic relations of aquatic insects, Annual Review of Entomology, 18, pp. 183-206, (1973)
[9]  
Cummins K.W., Riparian influence on stream ecosystems, Water Studies Centre, Chisholm Institute of Technology, East Caulfield, Australia, (1986)
[10]  
Cummins K.W., Wilzbach M.A., Gates D.M., Perry J.B., Taliaferro W.B., Shredders and riparian vegetation, Bioscience, 39, pp. 24-30, (1989)