4.6 Article

Effects of climate change on leaf breakdown by microorganisms and the shredder Phylloicus elektoros (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae)

Journal

HYDROBIOLOGIA
Volume 789, Issue 1, Pages 31-44

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-016-2689-7

Keywords

Aquatic insects; Carbon dioxide and temperature increase; Shredder consumption rate; Fungal biomass; Growth rate; Survival rate

Funding

  1. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologic (CNPq) [307479/20110, 302957/2014-6, 306328/2010-0]
  2. Programa de Apoio a Fixacao de Doutores no Amazonas-FIXAM/AM
  3. CT-Amazonia/CNPq [575875/2008-9]
  4. Pronex/CNPq/Fapeam-Aquatic insects
  5. CT-Hidro/Climatic Changes/Water Resources/CNPq [403949/2013-0]
  6. INCT/ADAPTA (CNPq/FAPEAM)-Amazon projects

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Climate change may affect species diversity and, consequently, ecological processes such as leaf decomposition. We evaluated the effects of increased temperature and carbon dioxide (CO2) on fungal biomass, leaf breakdown, and on survival and growth of the shredder Phylloicus elektoros. We hypothesized that climatic changes would result in lower survival and growth of shredders and lower leaf consumption by these organisms. On the other hand, we predicted an increase in fungal biomass in response to climatic changes. We conducted an experiment in Manaus, Brazil, using four microcosms that simulate real-time air temperature and CO2 (control chamber), as well as three other chambers subjected to fixed increases in temperature and CO2 as compared to the control chamber. The extreme condition represented an increase of similar to 4.5A degrees C in temperature and similar to 870 ppm in CO2 in relation to the control chamber. Total and shredder leaf-breakdown rates, fungal biomass, and shredder survival rates were significantly lower in warmer and CO2 concentrated atmospheres. Shredder growth rate and leaf breakdown by microorganisms were similar among all climatic conditions. With climatic changes, we found an increase in the relative importance of microorganisms on leaf-breakdown rates as compared to shredders. Thus, lower leaf breakdown and a change in the main decomposer due to future climatic conditions may result in major changes in the pathways of organic matter processing and, consequently, in aquatic food webs.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available