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Competition and facilitation within and between a snail and a mayfly larva and the effect on the grazing process

Hertonsson, Pia LU ; Åbjörnsson, Kajsa LU and Brönmark, Christer LU (2008) In Aquatic Ecology 42(4). p.669-677
Abstract
We studied the competitive effects within and between two taxonomically distant freshwater herbivores, a snail and a mayfly, common in Swedish lakes, Lymnaea peregra and Cloeon dipterum, respectively, and their effect on grazing in a laboratory experiment. The experimental set-up consisted of 2-l aquaria, each containing a periphyton covered tile. Intra- and interspecific effects were tested by increasing the density of one species at a time in four different treatments, (1) snails (intraspecific treatment), (2) mayflies (intraspecific treatment), (3) mixed-snails (interspecific treatments, snails kept constant) and (4) mixed-mayflies (interspecific treatments, mayflies kept constant). Intraspecific competition affected both snails and... (More)
We studied the competitive effects within and between two taxonomically distant freshwater herbivores, a snail and a mayfly, common in Swedish lakes, Lymnaea peregra and Cloeon dipterum, respectively, and their effect on grazing in a laboratory experiment. The experimental set-up consisted of 2-l aquaria, each containing a periphyton covered tile. Intra- and interspecific effects were tested by increasing the density of one species at a time in four different treatments, (1) snails (intraspecific treatment), (2) mayflies (intraspecific treatment), (3) mixed-snails (interspecific treatments, snails kept constant) and (4) mixed-mayflies (interspecific treatments, mayflies kept constant). Intraspecific competition affected both snails and mayflies negatively, i.e. increasing mortality with increasing con-specific density. Furthermore, there was a decrease in snail growth with increasing snail density. In the mixed-species treatments both species changed their microhabitat use indicating interspecific competition. Despite this, we also found a positive effect of mayfly density on snail growth, most likely due to indirect commensalism. No density-dependent effect of grazing on periphyton was found, probably due to interference competition between grazers. However, there was a significant difference in periphyton biomass, due to species composition of grazers. Irrespective of their densities, if they co-existed, the two grazer species decreased the periphyton biomass significantly compared with both single-species treatments. We considered this as a joint action of facilitation and interaction. Our results suggest that competition can be an important structuring factor in macroinvertebrate communities and that species composition can be significant for ecosystem processes within lentic environments. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Ephemeropteran, Grazing, Intraspecific, Interspecific, Mollusca, Periphyton
in
Aquatic Ecology
volume
42
issue
4
pages
669 - 677
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • wos:000260834900014
  • scopus:55949100115
ISSN
1386-2588
DOI
10.1007/s10452-007-9129-8
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
4b426ea3-e524-4730-a15e-86818bb9c52b (old id 1274824)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 11:35:40
date last changed
2024-05-07 07:57:05
@article{4b426ea3-e524-4730-a15e-86818bb9c52b,
  abstract     = {{We studied the competitive effects within and between two taxonomically distant freshwater herbivores, a snail and a mayfly, common in Swedish lakes, Lymnaea peregra and Cloeon dipterum, respectively, and their effect on grazing in a laboratory experiment. The experimental set-up consisted of 2-l aquaria, each containing a periphyton covered tile. Intra- and interspecific effects were tested by increasing the density of one species at a time in four different treatments, (1) snails (intraspecific treatment), (2) mayflies (intraspecific treatment), (3) mixed-snails (interspecific treatments, snails kept constant) and (4) mixed-mayflies (interspecific treatments, mayflies kept constant). Intraspecific competition affected both snails and mayflies negatively, i.e. increasing mortality with increasing con-specific density. Furthermore, there was a decrease in snail growth with increasing snail density. In the mixed-species treatments both species changed their microhabitat use indicating interspecific competition. Despite this, we also found a positive effect of mayfly density on snail growth, most likely due to indirect commensalism. No density-dependent effect of grazing on periphyton was found, probably due to interference competition between grazers. However, there was a significant difference in periphyton biomass, due to species composition of grazers. Irrespective of their densities, if they co-existed, the two grazer species decreased the periphyton biomass significantly compared with both single-species treatments. We considered this as a joint action of facilitation and interaction. Our results suggest that competition can be an important structuring factor in macroinvertebrate communities and that species composition can be significant for ecosystem processes within lentic environments.}},
  author       = {{Hertonsson, Pia and Åbjörnsson, Kajsa and Brönmark, Christer}},
  issn         = {{1386-2588}},
  keywords     = {{Ephemeropteran; Grazing; Intraspecific; Interspecific; Mollusca; Periphyton}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{669--677}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Aquatic Ecology}},
  title        = {{Competition and facilitation within and between a snail and a mayfly larva and the effect on the grazing process}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10452-007-9129-8}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s10452-007-9129-8}},
  volume       = {{42}},
  year         = {{2008}},
}