ARTÍCULO
Secondary production of caddisflies reflects environmental heterogeneity among tropical Andean streams
Fecha
2017Registro en:
ISSN 0018-8158, E-ISSN 1573-5117
10.1007/s10750-017-3183-6
Autor
Studholme, Ashley marie
Hampel , Henrietta
Finn Null, Debra Suzanne
Vazquez Zambrano, Raul Fernando
Institución
Resumen
Macroinvertebrate life history and secondary production have rarely been measured in tropical highland streams even though these streams are highly heterogeneous and display unique ecological settings compared to both those in the tropical
lowlands or in the temperate zone. We evaluated
secondary production and life history attributes of the
periphyton grazer caddisfly (Helicopsyche spp.) using
the size-frequency method in three Ecuadorian highland
stream reaches (2990–3727 meters above sea level) with contrasting riparian vegetative characteristics and differing flow and temperature regimes and periphyton biomass (as chlorophyll-a). Helicopsychedisplayed strong differences among streams in life history attributes and secondary production. We
estimated the least productive reach (89 mg m-2 -
year-1) to be an order of magnitude less than that of the
two more productive reaches (1556–2164 mg m-2 -
year-1). Secondary production positively correlated
with annual mean periphyton biomass and negatively
correlated with annual mean water temperature. Compared
to previous studies, mean secondary production
of Helicopsyche was relatively high. We conclude that
Helicopsyche secondary production in tropical highland
streams is highly heterogeneous among stream types. This strong variation among streams might ultimately depend on environmental factors influencing food availability (biomass of periphyton) and larval development rates (temperature regime).