New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts
Characterising food-webs in two New Zealand streams
N. G. JAARSMA
S. M. DE BOER
Department of Water Quality Management
and Aquatic Ecology
Agricultural University
P. O. Box 8080
6700 DD, Wageningen
The Netherlands
C. R. TOWNSEND+
R. M. THOMPSON
Department of Zoology
University of Otago
P.O. Box 56, Dunedin
New Zealand
E. D. EDWARDS
Otago Conservancy
Department of Conservation
Stuart Street, Dunedin
New Zealand
Abstract The food-web communities of two stony tributaries of
the Taieri River in New Zealand were documented. We placed heavy emphasis on
algal and macroinvertebrate taxonomy, identifying most taxa to species or
morpho-species level. Food-web attributes were derived from symmetrical
matrices using an Excel macro. The values of the food-web attributes are
generally consistent with generalities that have previously been reported in
food-web studies, although some hypothesisied relationships between connectance
and food-web size did not hold. The patterns detected were robust to the
inclusion or exclusion of species that were identified in gut contents but not
in field samples. The attributes strongly reflected the trophic status of the
streams. Dempsters Creek was classified as autotrophic (based on high primary
production and a high ratio of production to respiration) and displayed a
larger food-web size and longer food-chains than those seen in Healy Creek,
which was classified as heterotrophic (lower primary production and production
to respiration ratio). The importance of dynamic environmental attributes such
as production and disturbance in structuring food-webs is emphasised in this
study.
Keywords food-webs; community patterns; stream invertebrates;
stream algae; primary production; disturbance
+ Author to whom correspondence is to be
addressed.
M97039
Received 4 August 1997; accepted 8 December
1997
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1096K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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