Abstract
AbstractThe functional roles of freshwater mussels (Unionida) in tropical systems are poorly understood. We quantified the effects of mussel filtration, excretion and deposition in three anthropogenic tropical systems, i.e. a man-made lake, abandoned mining pool and rice paddy channel. Sinanodonta cf. woodiana (non-native) was present at all three sites, whilst Pilsbryoconcha compressa (native) was present in the channel only. Clearance rates, biodeposition rates and effects on suspended algal pigment and dissolved nutrient concentrations were quantified in controlled, replicated experiments in laboratory tanks with water from original habitats. Clearance rates were generally low and did not explain the high biodeposition rates observed. A considerable proportion of the natural diet of these populations may therefore consist of material that was not available in tanks, i.e. benthic or deposited algae. Deposition rates in lake and channel populations exceeded published rates from temperate and Mediterranean habitats, presumably due to prevalence of non-palatable material and/or higher metabolic rates in tropical systems. The presence of S. cf. woodiana but not P. compressa led to a strong increase in total ammonia nitrogen concentrations and N:P ratios, exceeding estimations from other systems. This study suggests that freshwater mussels play different functional roles in anthropogenic tropical habitats than in temperate systems.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference46 articles.
1. Ashraf, M. A., M. J. Maah & I. Yusoff, 2012. Morphology, geology and water quality assessment of former tin mining catchment. The Scientific World Journal 2012: 369206.
2. Atkinson, C. L., C. C. Vaughn, K. J. Forshay & J. T. Cooper, 2013. Aggregated filter-feeding consumers alter nutrient limitation: consequences for ecosystem and community dynamics. Ecology 94: 1359–1369.
3. Boulton, A. J., L. Boyero, A. P. Covich, M. Dobson, S. Lake & R. Pearson, 2008. Are tropical streams ecologically different from temperate streams? In Dudgeon, D. (ed.), Tropical Stream Ecology. Elsevier, Amsterdam: 257–284.
4. Byllaardt, J. & J. D. Ackerman, 2014. Hydrodynamic habitat influences suspension feeding by unionid mussels in freshwater ecosystems. Freshwater Biology 59: 1187–1196.
5. Chowdhury, G. W., A. Zieritz & D. C. Aldridge, 2016. Ecosystem engineering by mussels supports biodiversity and water clarity in a heavily polluted lake in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Freshwater Science 35: 188–199.
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献