COS 122-7 - Arthropod community response to lake-derived production in heathland food webs demonstrate ecosystem linkages

Friday, August 12, 2011: 10:10 AM
Ballroom B, Austin Convention Center
David Hoekman, National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON, Inc.), Boulder, CO, Jamin Dreyer, University of Kentucky and Claudio Gratton, Department of Entomology, University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI
Background/Question/Methods

Aquatic insects are a common and important subsidy to terrestrial systems yet little is known about how these inputs affect terrestrial food webs, especially around lakes.  Mývatn, a lake in northern Iceland, has extraordinary midge (Chironomidae) emergences that result in large inputs of biomass and nutrients to terrestrial arthropod communities.  We simulated this lake-to-land resource pulse by collecting midges from Mývatn and spreading their dried carcasses on 1-m2 plots at a nearby site that receives very little midge deposition.  We hypothesized a positive bottom-up response of detritivores that would be transmitted to their predators and would persist into the following year.  We sampled the arthropod community once per month for 3 consecutive summers; measuring arthropod density and natural stable isotope ratios (δ13C and δ15N).  

Results/Conclusions

Midge addition resulted in significantly different arthropod communities and increased densities of some taxa.  Detritivores, specifically Diptera larvae, Collembola and Acari increased in midge-addition plots, and so did some predators and parasitoids.  Arthropod densities remained elevated in years following midge addition and multiple years of midge addition further increased the density of higher-order consumers (e.g., Coleoptera and Hymenoptera).  Both detritivores and predators were isotopically enriched in midge-addition plots, with detritivorous Collembola showing the most dramatic shift.  Resources cross ecosystem boundaries and are assimilated over time because of life-history strategies that connect aquatic and terrestrial food webs and these systems cannot be fully understood in isolation from each other.

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