The effect of mixtures on colonisation of leaf litter decomposing in a stream and at its riparian zone
The effect of mixing litter on decomposition and colonisation has been the focus of many studies carried independently in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Those studies are carried out in different regions, use different experimental protocols and methodologies for the assessment of additive or n...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2014-06-01
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Series: | Web Ecology |
Online Access: | http://www.web-ecol.net/14/13/2014/we-14-13-2014.pdf |
Summary: | The effect of mixing litter on decomposition and colonisation has been the
focus of many studies carried independently in terrestrial and aquatic
ecosystems. Those studies are carried out in different regions, use
different experimental protocols and methodologies for the assessment of
additive or non-additive effects, and the conclusions on the effect of
mixtures vary accordingly. In this study I tested the hypothesis, via a
short-term decomposition experiment, that, when using the same experimental
protocol, mixtures have similar additive effects on decomposition and
associated biota in a stream and at its riparian zone. The effect of mixing
litter was assessed by comparing values in mixtures with the average of
single species, alder and poplar (method 1); comparing the value of a
species in mixture with the value of that species alone (method 2); and by a
graphical analysis of the average difference between observed and expected
values and the 95% confidence intervals (method 3). Method 1 was the most
conservative, detecting non-additive effects on macroinvertebrate abundance
only; method 2 detected non-additive effects on both dry mass remaining and
ergosterol, with differential responses of the leaf species and the habitat;
and method 3 detected non-additive effects on all variables except
ergosterol and percentage detritivore abundance and also identified different responses of the
leaves exposed in the terrestrial and the aquatic habitats. These results
show that (i) the methodology used to detect the effects of mixtures deeply
influences the results obtained, and may partially explain the diversity of
responses available in literature; and (ii) the effect of mixtures may
differ in the stream and at the riparian area. However, the findings of the
present work should be assessed in a larger-scale experiment in order to
generalise the effects of mixing litter on terrestrial and aquatic habitats. |
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ISSN: | 2193-3081 1399-1183 |