Longitudinal pattern of resource utilization by aquatic consumers along a disturbed subtropical urban river: Estimating the relative contribution of resources with stable isotope analysis.
Sai WangTuan-Tuan WangWen-Tong XiaZhong-Bing ChenSimon D StewartFeng-Juan YangGong ChengXiao-Di WangDing-Ying WangSong-Guang XiePublished in: Ecology and evolution (2021)
The utilization of food resources by aquatic consumers reflects the structure and functioning of river food webs. In lotic water systems, where food availability and predator-prey relationships vary with gradient changes in physical conditions, understanding diet assimilation by local communities is important for ecosystem conservation. In the subtropical Liuxi River, southern China, the relative contribution of basal resources to the diet assimilation of functional feeding groups (FFGs) was determined by stable carbon ( 13 C) and nitrogen ( 15 N) isotope analyses. The output of Bayesian mixing models showed that diatom-dominated periphyton (epilithic biofilm), aquatic C 3 plants (submerged hydrophytes), and suspended particulate organic matter (SPOM) associated with terrestrial C 3 plants contributed the most to the diet assimilation of FFGs in the upper, middle, and lower reaches, respectively. The relative contribution of consumer diet assimilation was weighted by the biomass (wet weight, g/m 2 ) of each FFG to reflect resource utilization at the assemblage level. From the upper to the lower reaches, the spatial variation in the diet assimilation of fish and invertebrate assemblages could be summarized as a longitudinal decrease in periphyton (from 57%-76% to <3%) and an increase in SPOM (from <7% to 51%-68%) with a notable midstream increase in aquatic C 3 plants (23%-48%). These results indicate that instream consumers in the Liuxi River rely more on autochthonous production (e.g., periphyton and submerged hydrophytes) than on terrestrially derived allochthonous matter (e.g., terrestrial plants). The pattern of resource utilization by consumers in the mid-upper Liuxi River is consistent with findings from other open subtropical and neotropical rivers and provides evidence for the riverine productivity model. Our study indicates that protecting inherent producers in rivers (e.g., periphyton and submerged hydrophytes) and restoring their associated habitats (e.g., riffles with cobble substrate) are conducive to aquatic ecosystem management.
Keyphrases
- physical activity
- risk assessment
- weight loss
- human health
- water quality
- climate change
- organic matter
- staphylococcus aureus
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- body mass index
- healthcare
- magnetic resonance
- mental health
- health information
- minimally invasive
- amino acid
- weight gain
- computed tomography
- mass spectrometry
- wastewater treatment
- contrast enhanced
- biofilm formation
- liquid chromatography