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Initial versus longer-term effects of tadpole declines on algae in a Neotropical stream
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Initial versus longer-term effects of tadpole declines on algae in a Neotropical stream

Scott Connelly, Catherine M. Pringle, Thomas Barnum, Meshagae Hunte-Brown, Susan Kilham, Matt R. Whiles, Karen R. Lips, Checo Colon-Gaud and Roberto Brenes
Freshwater biology, v 59(6), pp 1113-1122
01 Jun 2014

Abstract

Ecology Environmental Sciences & Ecology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Marine & Freshwater Biology Science & Technology
Information about temporal patterns of ecological responses to species losses is integral to our understanding of the ultimate effects of declining biodiversity. As part of the Tropical Amphibian Declines in Streams (TADS) project, we quantified changes in algal biomass and N cycling in algae in upland Panamanian streams following the widespread decline of larval anurans. Reach-scale monitoring during and after a catastrophic, disease-driven amphibian decline showed significant 2.8-fold increases (P<0.05) in algal biomass in pools and 6.3-fold increases in riffles in the 5months following the decline. 3years after the decline, the magnitude of this initial change dampened to increases (P<0.05) of 2-fold in pools and 3.5-fold in riffles over pre-decline levels. Similarly, total organic matter of benthic biofilms, measured as ash-free dry mass (AFDM), increased significantly by 2.2-fold in pools and 2.3-fold in riffles in the initial 5-month post-decline period, with the magnitude of these changes dampening slightly to a 2-fold increase in pools and 1.9-fold increase in riffles over pre-decline levels after 3years (P<0.05 for differences at 5months and 3years). There were initial increases (P<0.05) in Chl a:AFDM ratios 5months after the decline, but ratios had returned to pre-decline levels after 3years. Algal food quality (as C/N) increased slightly, but not significantly, during the initial 5-month post-decline period and remained constant over 3years. Mean delta N-15 in biofilms in pool habitat (measured over the reach scale) was significantly depleted initially following tadpole declines and remained significantly depleted 3years after the decline (4.34 parts per thousand pre- versus 3.24 parts per thousand post-; P<0.05), suggesting that the loss of tadpoles reduced N recycling. Increases in abundance and production of some grazing macroinvertebrate taxa after the decline may have contributed to the gradual reduction in the difference between initial and longer-term post-decline algal biomass. However, algal biomass was still 2-fold greater than pre-decline levels after 3years, indicating that grazing macroinvertebrates did not fully compensate for the loss of tadpoles.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Ecology
Marine & Freshwater Biology
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