Macroinvertebrate Community and Leaf Litter Breakdown Measures Lack Concordance Associated with Singular or Multiple Stressors

27 Pages Posted: 4 May 2024

See all articles by Ben John Kefford

Ben John Kefford

University of Canberra

Andrew J. Brooks

University of Canberra

Susan J. Nichols

University of Canberra

Jon P. Bray

University of Canberra

Abstract

Freshwater ecosystems are being degraded by a wide range of stressors resulting from human activities. Various structural and functional metrics or indices are used to assess the ‘health’ or condition of riverine ecosystems. It is uncertain if structural or functional metrics or indices respond to different stressors and whether some are more responsive to stressors in general. Here we analyse the results from four independent outdoor mesocosms experiments involving the manipulation of various chemical stressors - two types of salinity (synthetic marine salts (SMS) and sodium bicarbonate), two insecticides (malathion and sulfoxaflor), increased nutrients (N and P), increased sedimentation and two combinations of stressors (1: malathion, nutrients and sedimentation, 2: sulfoxaflor, nutrients and sedimentation). We compare the effects of these singular or multiple stressors on stream macroinvertebrate community structure, and Eucalyptus camaldulensis leaf litter breakdown rates by microbes and total (microbes and invertebrates) leaf litter breakdown rates. Macroinvertebrate communities were adversely affected by the two sets of multiple stressors, SMS, and both insecticides yet, and in contrast to several published studies, both microbial and total leaf litter was unaffected. Nutrients and sodium bicarbonate, increased breakdown rates or had a unimodal ‘Ո’ shaped response, with maxima at intermediate levels. Sedimentation by fine sand, however, decreased total leaf litter breakdown, while not affecting microbial leaf litter breakdown. Divergent responses between the effects of stressors on leaf litter breakdown rates that we observed and those in the literature may be caused by multiple mechanisms, including differences between communities, functional redundancy and differences in stressor magnitude and interactions with other (unknown) variables.

Keywords: function vs. structure, stream invertebrates, leaf litter breakdown, streams

Suggested Citation

Kefford, Ben John and Brooks, Andrew J. and Nichols, Susan J. and Bray, Jon P., Macroinvertebrate Community and Leaf Litter Breakdown Measures Lack Concordance Associated with Singular or Multiple Stressors. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4816992 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4816992

Ben John Kefford (Contact Author)

University of Canberra ( email )

Canberra, 2601
Australia

Andrew J. Brooks

University of Canberra ( email )

Canberra, 2601
Australia

Susan J. Nichols

University of Canberra ( email )

Canberra, 2601
Australia

Jon P. Bray

University of Canberra ( email )

Canberra, 2601
Australia

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