4.5 Article

Dietary changes in predators and scavengers in a nocturnally illuminated riparian ecosystem

Journal

OIKOS
Volume 127, Issue 7, Pages 960-969

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/oik.04696

Keywords

spiders; food web; ALAN; predator-prey; stable isotopes; SIAR; feeding strategies

Categories

Funding

  1. Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency of the European Commission
  2. Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Germany [BMBF-033L038A]
  3. Federal Agency for Nature Conservation, Germany [FKZ 3514821700]
  4. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), Leipzig, Germany
  5. Academy of Finland [296918]

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Aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems are linked by fluxes of carbon and nutrients in riparian areas. Processes that alter these fluxes may therefore change the diet and composition of consumer communities. We used stable carbon isotope (C-13) analyses to test whether the increased abundance of aquatic prey observed in a previous study led to a dietary shift in riparian consumers in areas illuminated by artificial light at night (ALAN). We measured the contribution of aquatic-derived carbon to diets in riparian arthropods in experimentally lit and unlit sites along an agricultural drainage ditch in northern Germany. The C-13 signature of the spider Pachygnatha clercki (Tetragnathidae) was 0.7 parts per thousand lower in the ALAN-illuminated site in summer, indicating a greater assimilation of aquatic prey. Bayesian mixing models also supported higher intake of aquatic prey under ALAN in spring (34% versus 21%). In contrast, isotopic signatures for P. clercki (0.3 parts per thousand) and Pardosa prativaga (0.7 parts per thousand) indicated a preference for terrestrial prey in the illuminated site in spring. Terrestrial prey intake increased in spring for P. clercki under ALAN (from 70% to 74%) and in spring and autumn for P. prativaga (from 68% to 77% and from 67% to 72%) and Opiliones (from 68% to 72%; 68% to 75%). This was despite most of the available prey (up to 80%) being aquatic in origin. We conclude that ALAN changed the diet of riparian secondary consumers by increasing the density of both aquatic and terrestrial prey. Dietary changes were species- and season-specific, indicating that the effects of ALAN may interact with phenology and feeding strategy. Because streetlights can occur in high density near freshwaters, ALAN may have widespread effects on aquatic-terrestrial ecosystem linkages.

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