Standard Versus Natural: Assessing the Impact of Environmental Variables on Organic Matter Decomposition in Streams Using Three Substrates

Author:

Schreiner Verena C.1ORCID,Liebmann Liana23,Feckler Alexander14,Liess Matthias25,Link Moritz1,Schneeweiss Anke1ORCID,Truchy Amélie67,von Tümpling Wolf2,Vormeier Philipp25ORCID,Weisner Oliver12,Schäfer Ralf B.1,Bundschuh Mirco16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. iES Landau, Institute for Environmental Sciences RPTU Kaiserslautern‐Landau Landau Germany

2. Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, UFZ Leipzig Germany

3. Department Evolutionary Ecology & Environmental Toxicology, Faculty of Biological Sciences, Institute of Ecology, Diversity and Evolution Goethe University Frankfurt Frankfurt am Main Germany

4. Eusserthal Ecosystem Research Station RPTU Kaisterslautern‐Landau Eusserthal Germany

5. Institute for Environmental Research RWTH Aachen University Aachen Germany

6. Department of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Uppsala Sweden

7. INRAE Centre Lyon‐Grenoble Auvergne‐Rhône‐Alpes Villeurbanne France

Abstract

AbstractThe decomposition of allochthonous organic matter, such as leaves, is a crucial ecosystem process in low‐order streams. Microbial communities, including fungi and bacteria, colonize allochthonous organic material, break up large molecules, and increase the nutritional value for macroinvertebrates. Environmental variables are known to affect microbial as well as macroinvertebrate communities and alter their ability to decompose organic matter. Studying the relationship between environmental variables and decomposition has mainly been realized using leaves, with the drawbacks of differing substrate composition and consequently between‐study variability. To overcome these drawbacks, artificial substrates have been developed, serving as standardizable surrogates. In the present study, we compared microbial and total decomposition of leaves with the standardized substrates of decotabs and, only for microbial decomposition, of cotton strips, across 70 stream sites in a Germany‐wide study. Furthermore, we identified the most influential environmental variables for the decomposition of each substrate from a range of 26 variables, including pesticide toxicity, concentrations of nutrients, and trace elements, using stability selection. The microbial as well as total decomposition of the standardized substrates (i.e., cotton strips and decotabs) were weak or not associated with that of the natural substrate (i.e., leaves, r² < 0.01 to r² = 0.04). The decomposition of the two standardized substrates, however, showed a moderate association (r² = 0.21), which is probably driven by their similar composition, with both being made of cellulose. Different environmental variables were identified as the most influential for each of the substrates and the directions of these relationships contrasted between the substrates. Our results imply that these standardized substrates are unsuitable surrogates when investigating the decomposition of allochthonous organic matter in streams. Environ Toxicol Chem 2023;42:2007–2018. © 2023 The Authors. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of SETAC.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Umweltbundesamt

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Environmental Chemistry

Cited by 1 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

1. Ecological Theory and Concepts in Ecotoxicology;Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry;2023-07-28

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