Can a piscicide treatment alter stream ecosystem functioning through trophic cascading effects on benthic invertebrates?
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/21758Date
2021-05-18Type
Master thesisMastergradsoppgave
Author
Seljestokken, VegarAbstract
Processing of detritus is an important ecosystem function in freshwaters. In rivers and streams, the
activity of shredding invertebrates play an important role in processing of coarse-particulate organic
matter such as leaf litter. In stream food webs, fish may act as top predators and control activity of
consumers such as shredders top down. This top-down effect may be of a directly consumptive
nature, or indirect and mediated by species traits.
Most studies on trophically cascading effects in stream ecosystems are done in small scale, either in
small laboratory setups, or in in-stream experimental units such as cages or flow through channels.
These setups are very useful in exploring specific effects and relationships, but might not be adequate
to document effects on whole stream or catchment scale.
I utilized a management-imposed rotenone treatment of the sub-arctic watercourse Skibotn catchment
in Troms, northern Norway, as a setup for a large scale field experiment. Using pairs of coarse- and
fine-meshed plastic litter bags filled with dry birch ( Betula pubescens ) leaf litter, I measured
decomposition rates ( kd −
1 ), and collected and identified leaf litter colonizing invertebrates in riffle
habitats in the autumn one year before (2014), and one year after (2017) the treatment. Nordkjos
catchment, an untreated catchment in the adjacent area, was studied simultaneously.
Shredding invertebrates contributed to litter decomposition in both years in all but one stream, but I
found no significant change in invertebrate-mediated decomposition between the two years on
catchment scale. There was no marked change in density or diversity of invertebrates in the litter bags
between the two years, while fish had a diverse diet dominated by Baetid mayflies. However, young
of the year salmonids were present already in a few sites after the treatment.
Results of this field experiment indicate that fish did not have a strong top-down effect on shredding
invertebrates in Skibotn catchment. The most likely explanation is that fish densities were low and
their diets were not dominated by the most important shredder species. The studied streams are
heterogenic environments and subject to natural stochasticity that might outweigh any small
ecological effects, emphasizing the importance of good background data when performing before-
after- impact control studies.
Publisher
UiT Norges arktiske universitetUiT The Arctic University of Norway
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